On the role of technology in human-dog relationships: a future of nightmares or dreams?
Dirk van der Linden, Brittany I. Davidson, Orit Hirsch-Matsioulas, and, Anna Zamansky

TL;DR
This study explores how digital technologies influence human-dog relationships, revealing mixed perceptions and emphasizing the need to focus on supportive caregiving rather than remote interactions.
Contribution
It provides qualitative insights into dog owners' attitudes towards technology in daily routines, highlighting the potential for technology to both enhance and threaten human-dog bonds.
Findings
Technologies support chores like cleaning positively.
Activities like walking and playing have diverse attitudes.
Current trends favor remote interactions, which may threaten bonds.
Abstract
Digital technologies that help people take care of their dogs are becoming more widespread. Yet, little research explores what the role of technology in the human-dog relationship should be. We conducted a qualitative study incorporating quantitative and thematic analysis of 155 UK dog owners reflecting on their daily routines and technology's role in it, disentangling the what-where-why of interspecies routines and activities, technological desires, and rationales for technological support across common human-dog activities. We found that increasingly entangled daily routines lead to close multi-species households where dog owners conceptualize technology as having a role to support them in giving care to their dogs. When confronted with the role of technology across various activities, only chores like cleaning up after their dogs lead to largely positive considerations, while…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHuman-Animal Interaction Studies
