
The fleeting way cats make eye contact may explain why some autistic children develop stronger relationships with pet cats than pet dogs.
The “less intrusive glance” of cats, compared to the “long gazes” that dogs make, might align better with autistic children’s “social needs,” says Marine Grandgeorge at the University of Rennes in France.
“Cats don’t hold a stare but tend to look away after short bouts of eye contact, and it’s possible that this feels more comfortable for people with autism,” she says.
Advertisement
Previous research based on questionnaires with parents has shown that autistic children develop relationships with pets and often have “privileged” relationships with cats, says Grandgeorge.
She and her colleagues visited 42 homes in western France and observed 23 autistic boys and 19 neurotypical boys and girls, all aged 6 to 12, who had either a pet cat or dog.
By analysing the videos made during these visits, the researchers found that neurotypical children tended to gaze longer at their pets than children with autism did, she says.
They noted that dogs – as well as children who aren’t autistic – tended to gaze for at least a second at a time during eye contact, says Grandgeorge. Cats – as well as autistic children – tended to give much shorter glances.
“There’s this belief that autistic children don’t want social contact with humans, but maybe they just don’t want humans to insist on creating a connection through long gazes, because that feels too intrusive,” says Martine Hausberger at the French National Centre for Scientific Research, who worked on the study.
“Cats glance, look away, then glance back again briefly, and what we see is the child then actively seeking attention from the cat,” says Hausberger. “That could be stimulating and developing social skills that are often considered lacking in autistic people.”
The findings are somewhat surprising for James Cusack, CEO of the UK autism research charity Autistica. “Many of the autistic adults in our organisation actually prefer dogs!” says Cusack, who is autistic himself. “But autistic people are enormously diverse, so it’s normal to have both ‘dog people’ and ‘cat people’ in the autism population.”
Even so, the gregarious nature of dogs might seem “intimidating” to some autistic children, who “might find them unpredictable”, he says.
“The important thing here is that having a pet in the house can be very positive for autistic children’s wellbeing,” says Cusack.
Frontiers in Psychology