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Please use the following Persistent Identifier (PID) to cite this document:
https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2020.575221

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Development and Application of the Owner-Bird Relationship Scale (OBRS) to Assess the Relation of Humans to Their Pet Birds

[journal article]

Burmeister, Anne-Kathrin
Drasch, Katrin
Rinder, Monika
Prechsl, Sebastian
Peschel, Andrea
Korbel, Rüdiger
Saam, Nicole J.

Abstract

Only a few birds besides domestic pigeons and poultry can be described as domesticated. Therefore, keeping a pet bird can be challenging, and the human-avian relationship will have a major influence on the quality of this cohabitation. Studies that focus on characterizing the owner-bird relationship... view more

Only a few birds besides domestic pigeons and poultry can be described as domesticated. Therefore, keeping a pet bird can be challenging, and the human-avian relationship will have a major influence on the quality of this cohabitation. Studies that focus on characterizing the owner-bird relationship generally use adapted cat/dog scales which may not identify its specific features. Following a sociological approach, a concept of human-animal relationship was developed leading to three types of human-animal relationship (impersonal, personal, and close personal). This concept was used to develop a 21-item owner-bird-relationship scale (OBRS). This scale was applied to measure the relationship between pet bird owners (or keepers) (n = 1,444) and their birds in an online survey performed in Germany. Factor analysis revealed that the relationship between owner and bird consisted of four dimensions: the tendency of the owner to anthropomorphize the bird; the social support the bird provides for the owner; the empathy, attentiveness, and respect of the owner toward the bird; and the relationship of the bird toward the owner. More than one quarter of the German bird owners of this sample showed an impersonal, half a personal, and less than a quarter a close personal relationship to their bird. The relationship varied with the socio-demographic characteristics of the owners, such as gender, marital status, and education. This scale supports more comprehensive quantitative research into the human-bird relationship in the broad field of human-animal studies including the psychology and sociology of animals as well as animal welfare and veterinary medicine.... view less

Keywords
demographic factors; social support; Federal Republic of Germany; social relations; social factors; human being; animal

Classification
Natural Science and Engineering, Applied Sciences

Free Keywords
ZA5242 v1.1.0: German General Social Survey - ALLBUS 2014; human-animal relationship; pet birds; companion bird; scale; anthropomorphism; social support (MeSHterm)

Document language
English

Publication Year
2020

Page/Pages
p. 1-13

Journal
Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 7 (2020) 575221

ISSN
2297-1769

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.