Dairy cattle sometimes do not generalize a learned aversion to a handl
er from one location to another. In experiment 1, we examined whether
dairy cows (n = 24) could learn to avoid handlers in one location bur
approach them in another location. Each cow was treated seven times, b
oth in their home stall and in a special treatment stall, by one perso
n. In one stall, the cows were treated aversively, while in the other
stall, the same person treated them gently. During a 1-min test sessio
n, the distance the cow kept from the treatment person was scored ever
y 5 s and the mean score calculated. Before treatments, the cows stood
farther from the person in the novel treatment stall than in the home
stall. After treatments, the cows stood farther from the person in th
e stall where they had been treated aversively than in the stall where
they had been handled gently. However, this was complicated by the gr
eater distance kept in the treatment stall than in the home stall. Dis
tance scores were only weakly correlated between stalls, and before an
d after treatments. In experiment 2, a further 12 cows were treated av
ersively or gently 11 times by one person in two different treatment s
talls. The cows stood farthest from the person in the stall where they
had been handled aversively, and tended to stand farther from an unfa
miliar person in the stall where they had been handled aversively. Dai
ry cows can readily learn to avoid or approach the same person based o
n the location. Measures of cattle's temperament based on distances ke
pt may not be reliable because such distances depend on location and p
revious handling. One way to reduce the extent that cows develop fear
of their handlers, as a result of aversive management procedures, may
be to apply these procedures outside the cows' home stalls. (C) 1998 E
lsevier Science B.V.