Why does my cat bite when I pet her?
Petting-induced aggression is overstimulation. Cats have an arousal threshold, and the right amount of petting feels good — past that, it doesn’t.
Petting-induced aggression is overstimulation. Cats have an arousal threshold, and the right amount of petting feels good — past that, it doesn’t.
Usually unspent energy or hunger. In senior cats, can be cognitive decline or hyperthyroidism. When to escalate.
Hiding is normal cat behavior; excessive hiding usually isn’t. Stress, pain or illness are the three buckets to consider.
Yes, with positive reinforcement and patience. The dog model doesn’t translate, but the operant-conditioning principles do.
You can’t stop scratching (it’s hardwired) but you can redirect it. The post, the placement and the transition that work.
Indoor cats store the predator energy they aren’t spending. The fix is structured daytime play, not a quieter cat.
The practical playbook for indoor cat behavior and enrichment: what cats actually need, the highest-leverage setup changes, and when behavior is a vet visit.
Modestly, yes — for specific applications like scratching and multi-cat tension. The marketing oversells; the data shows a real but small effect.
A small apartment can hold a lot of cat territory if you build upward. The apartment-design guide to vertical space.
Yes, and indoor cats especially. Bored cats over-groom, gain weight, sleep more than they should, or get destructive. Enrichment is the fix.