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(Cat)egory mistake: the invalidity of animal shelter behavior assessments

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Abstract

Animal shelters face diverse challenges, which often necessitate making life-or-death decisions for animals in their care. One strategy used to determine whether admitting, adoption, or euthanasia is appropriate is to assess an animal’s in-shelter or pre-admission behavior to infer its “personality.” Shelters do this because potential adopters are often interested in knowing an animal’s personality as it provides information about whether the animal will fit in their home. However, shelter behavior assessments are a broad topic. To narrow focus, I explore a relatively novel development: feline behavior assessments. These assessments suggest that shelter workers can make a valid inference from in-shelter behavior to long-term, consistent personality. I argue that assessments do not, and might not be able to, validly infer personality in shelters; I utilize recent philosophical work by Kaiser & Müller (Biol Philos 36:1–25, 2021) on personality to do so. I build on their work by showing how shelter assessments do not meet their criteria and fall victim to epistemic bias in privileging some behaviors. Because feline assessments fail to meet philosophically robust definitions of animal personality and have methodological biases, these assessments do not provide valid insight into a shelter animal’s personality and should not be used.

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Notes

  1. While there are good reasons to question the term “euthanasia” employed by animal shelters (Persson et al. 2020), I use the term due to its common usage in the field.

  2. There is no reporting body for shelter euthanasia rates, which makes estimation difficult. Recent attempts (Bartlett et al. 2005) make inferences from available data. Because other estimates range higher than 1 million animals euthanized annually (Nassar & Moulton 1992; SAC 2019), it is reasonable to use this conservative figure.

  3. Taylor and Mills (2006) decry what I call informal assessments. Others (Mornement et al. 2009; Rayment et al. 2015; Clay et al. 2020) provide analysis of specific canine assessments to show their inadequacy, both conceptually and in their predictive ability. Finally, others suggest that there is no good reason to use assessments at all (Patronek & Bradley 2016). While my critiques are similar, the demands on behavior assessments for dogs and cats are different. Some assessments for dogs try to predict whether the animal should be a “working dog.” Furthermore, some behaviors (e.g., biting) are considered a more serious problem with dogs than cats so are approached differently via assessment; this latter point is a concern I raise later.

  4. It is often unclear whether personality or temperament are the same concepts. Some suggest that the more general term “personality” should be standard to avoid confusion (Litchfield et al. 2017). In this paper, I present what I take shelter assessments to be getting at. They aim to elicit and evaluate behavior at one or more points in time to infer an animal’s long-term, stable personality.

  5. I thank an anonymous reviewer for this observation.

  6. There are disagreements in the measures cited here. I aim not to adjudicate them. Rather, it is sufficient that researchers believe felines have personality.

  7. I am grateful to an anonymous reviewer for comments leading to this section.

  8. I am grateful to the Society for the Study of Ethics and Animals 2020 conference organizers and attendees for comments on an earlier draft. I also wish to thank two anonymous reviewers for their time and helpful suggestions.

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Correspondence to Derek Halm.

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Halm, D. (Cat)egory mistake: the invalidity of animal shelter behavior assessments. Biol Philos 36, 35 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10539-021-09810-5

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