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The caregivers were asked to use a chest-mounted camera (like a cellphone or GoPro) to film the first few minutes of returning home while behaving as naturally as possible. The team then analyzed just the first 100 seconds of each recording, tracking 22 specific behaviors. These included the number of meows, head-rubbing against the leg and stress-related behaviors like yawning.

Meowing more for men

After analyzing hundreds of clips, one thing stood out clearly: cats vocalized more frequently (meows, purrs, chirps) when greeting male caregivers than when greeting female caregivers. This increased frequency was the same across the board, regardless of the cat's age, breed, sex, or even the size of the household. `On average, cats produced 4.3 meows in the first 100 seconds of greeting men compared to just 1.8 with women’
I definitely been experiencing this as of late! Any stackers out there confirm this behavior with their stacker cats?
166 sats \ 1 reply \ @grayruby 5h
That's really interesting. Is that because men are generally less attentive of their needs so they need to vocalize more whereas women would probably greet the cat right away and gave it what it wanted as soon as they got home?
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Yeah I think cats know men have less patience thus they can manipulate the man into getting attention and eventually what it wants!
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ehhh.... 31 cats doesn't seem like a very large sample size. sorry for being "that guy"
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Hahah
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My cat screamed at everyone at home and then bit us when we petted him. Ungrateful ball of darkness he was.
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