
Dr Morgan Heslop.
Born and raised in聽Tauranga, and now living in the聽Bay of Islands, Dr Heslop graduated with her PhD from聽Te Kunenga ki P奴rehuroa 羞羞视频 this week. For her doctoral research, she investigated an underexplored topic in animal welfare science: boredom.
鈥淢y thesis explores what boredom might be like for animals. The tricky thing is, unlike with people, we can鈥檛 just ask animals how they feel, so we have to get creative and scientific about recognising their emotions.鈥
Dr Heslop says people often assume they can read animal emotions easily 鈥 like knowing when your dog is excited for a walk or your cat is angling for dinner. But she cautions that our intuitions don鈥檛 always line up with reality.
鈥淎 classic example is when a dog pulls its lips back and looks like it's smiling 鈥 people think it鈥檚 happy, but it might actually be scared. If we misinterpret signals like this, it can lead to dangerous or stressful situations. It鈥檚 no different with boredom 鈥 we might think we鈥檙e giving an animal everything it needs, when in fact, it could be struggling in silence.鈥
Unlike emotions such as聽pain or hunger, which have clear biological indicators, boredom doesn鈥檛 stem from physical discomfort. It鈥檚 a complicated emotional state linked to things like聽cognition, motivation, attention and meaning聽鈥 concepts that are difficult to measure, especially in animals.
鈥淲e can鈥檛 measure boredom with a blood test or a stethoscope. We have to look at how animals behave over time 鈥 patterns, not isolated moments,鈥 Dr Heslop explains.
Through her research, she argues that boredom isn鈥檛 about any one behaviour, like pacing or yawning, but rather about聽patterns of behaviour聽that indicate an animal is seeking to organise, change or support its mental workload.
鈥淎 bored animal might return to the same toy over and over, or get up and move around constantly, as if trying to find something to do. Recognising these patterns takes time and close observation, often more than we typically dedicate to assessing an animal鈥檚 emotional state.鈥
The inspiration for this work came during the early stages of the聽COVID-19 pandemic. Like many others, Dr Heslop found herself confined to her home, living a restricted and repetitive life, much like many animals do every day.
鈥淚 realised I was experiencing something that鈥檚 very normal for animals in human care 鈥 having no control over where I went, who I saw or what I did. I was bored, and it made me think: what if this is how animals feel all the time, and we just don鈥檛 see it?鈥
This idea led her to discover that聽animal boredom is a relatively new field, with only a handful of studies published globally. Seeing a gap in the science, and a chance to make a difference, she dove in.
Dr Heslop鈥檚 findings have the potential to聽change how we care for animals聽across a wide range of environments.
鈥淭hink of all the animals kept in cages, crates, kennels, tanks and stables. Their environments are often unchanging and restrictive, which are key ingredients for boredom. If boredom is widespread, it could be one of the most common and overlooked welfare issues today.鈥
What surprised her most during her research was how聽diverse people鈥檚 experiences of boredom are聽鈥 something that further complicates understanding the emotion in animals.
鈥淪ome people find boredom draining and low-energy, while others describe it as agitating or even painful. And then some people say they never get bored at all! That really highlighted how diverse emotional experiences can be, and how careful we need to be when trying to interpret what another being 鈥 especially an animal 鈥 might be feeling.鈥
While her thesis was at the heart of her time at Massey, Dr Heslop made the most of every opportunity around her. She took part in the聽Three Minute Thesis competition, represented students on the聽Human Ethics Committee, supported peers in their own research and taught both undergraduate and postgraduate students.
鈥淏ut the most important part of my time at Massey was the people. I had an incredible team of supervisors, and I made life-long friends. When things got tough 鈥 and they always do in research 鈥 having people who understand, support you and can make you laugh makes all the difference.鈥
Now, with her PhD completed, she is working as a聽Research Officer at Massey, a role she鈥檒l hold until the end of the year before heading overseas.
鈥淚鈥檓 hoping to keep working in animal welfare 鈥 to take the skills and knowledge I鈥檝e developed and apply them in practical ways that improve the lives of animals. There鈥檚 still so much we don鈥檛 understand, and I want to be part of changing that.鈥
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