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Do Horses React to Human Emotions? New Research on Voice, Stress, and Welfare
A 2025 study found that horses do react to human emotional voices — distinguishing between anger, fear, sadness, and happiness. But how strongly they respond depends on their welfare state and history with humans. Horses in poorer conditions showed stronger alarm responses. Here's what the research means for how you speak to, handle, and care for your horse.
Human(e) Equine Project
Nov 4, 20253 min read


Reading Horse Emotions and Body Language: What Research Shows
Can you accurately read your horse's emotions through their body language? A 2025 study from Oklahoma State University suggests most owners — including experienced ones — struggle more than they realize. Researchers found that a structured online course significantly improved horse owners' confidence in recognizing equine emotional states and their stated intention to change how they interact with and manage their horses. Understanding what your horse is feeling begins with
Human(e) Equine Project
Mar 11, 20255 min read


How Horse Owners Define Equine Welfare, Wellbeing, and Quality of Life
Ask ten horse owners whether their horse has good welfare and you will get ten different answers. A qualitative study from the University of Liverpool explores why — and what it means for the way we communicate about equine wellbeing.
Human(e) Equine Project
Oct 26, 20226 min read
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