Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology, School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9AD, UK
2. Department of Clinical and Health Psychology, School of Health in Social Science, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9AG, UK
Abstract
Although many companion animal (or “pet”) owners report that their relationships with their pets are important, we know little about how animal ownership duration and animal life stage are related to relationship quality. In a sample of 1303 dog and cat owners, the present research explored the associations between relationship duration, pet life stage (puppy/kitten, young adult, mature adult, and senior), and four markers of relationship quality: pet-related self-expansion, perceived pet responsiveness, perceived pet insensitivity, and human–animal bond. We found that relationship duration was negatively and linearly associated with self-expansion for both dog and cat owners. Results comparing relationship quality markers across pet life stages revealed that for both dog and cat owners, self-expansion was higher for owners of younger animals compared to owners of older animals. There were no significant effects for perceived pet responsiveness, perceived pet insensitivity, or human–animal bond based on relationship duration or animal life stage. These findings indicate that the duration of the relationship with one’s pet and animal life stage have implications for how much people feel a pet helps them grow, whereas other markers of human–pet relationship quality likely vary based on other experiences.
Funder
University of Edinburgh Research Support Grant
UK Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) New Investigator
Reference64 articles.
1. An investigation of the Rusbult Investment Model of Commitment in relationships with pets;Baker;Anthrozoös,2016
2. Bowen, J. (2023, January 17). Support from dogs in daily life and in times of crisis [Conference presentation]. Proceedings of the Society for Companion Animal Studies 2023 Conference, Online. Available online: https://www.scas.org.uk/home/scas-annual-conference/.
3. Why we outlive our pets;Grimm;Science,2015
4. AAHA (2024, March 14). Canine Life Stage Definitions. Available online: https://www.aaha.org/aaha-guidelines/life-stage-canine-2019/canine-life-stage-definitions/.
5. AAHA (2024, March 04). 2021 AAHA/AAFP Feline Life Stage Guidelines. Available online: https://www.aaha.org/aaha-guidelines/life-stage-feline-2021/feline-life-stage-home/.