Dans cet épisode, Mathilde revient sur ces idées qui circulent parfois, selon lesquelles il ne faut pas trop dépenser son chien ni le faire travailler. Au travers de publications scientifiques établies sur plusieurs espèces, on discute de l'idée que l'on peut ou non trop dépenser son chien.
Roshanaei-Moghaddam, B., Katon, W. J., & Russo, J. (2009). The longitudinal effects of depression on physical activity. General hospital psychiatry, 31(4), 306-315.
Nimmo, M. A., Leggate, M., Viana, J. L., & King, J. A. (2013). The effect of physical activity on mediators of inflammation. Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism, 15(s3), 51-60.
Albert, M. A., Glynn, R. J., & Ridker, P. M. (2004). Effect of physical activity on serum C-reactive protein. The American journal of cardiology, 93(2), 221-225.
Neeper, S. A., Gómez-Pinilla, F., Choi, J., & Cotman, C. W. (1996). Physical activity increases mRNA for brain-derived neurotrophic factor and nerve growth factor in rat brain. Brain research, 726(1-2), 49-56.
Sierakowiak, A., Mattsson, A., Gómez-Galán, M., Feminía, T., Graae, L., Aski, S. N., ... & Åberg, E. (2015). Hippocampal morphology in a rat model of depression: the effects of physical activity. The open neuroimaging journal, 9, 1.
McGowan, R. T., Rehn, T., Norling, Y., & Keeling, L. J. (2014). Positive affect and learning: exploring the “Eureka Effect” in dogs. Animal cognition, 17, 577-587.
Väätäjä, H., Majaranta, P., Cardó, A. V., Isokoski, P., Somppi, S., Vehkaoja, A., ... & Surakka, V. (2021). The Interplay Between Affect, Dog's Physical Activity and Dog–Owner Relationship. Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 8, 673407.
Hintze, S., & Yee, J. R. (2021). Animals in flow–Towards the scientific study of intrinsic reward in animals. PsyArXiv.