CorvusCorax
Deary me...
Well, I liked it 
Thoughts?
http://pawsnmotion.wordpress.com/2010/09/04/rhetoric-in-dog-training-literature/
Thoughts?
http://pawsnmotion.wordpress.com/2010/09/04/rhetoric-in-dog-training-literature/
She's a GIRL!!!!!!
My Bella is something similar, use any sort of pressure and she caves. Hard for a grumpy cow like meand of course, B is quite like Dakota - we were in a line up last week with a dobe on one side of him and a very strong working dog on the other, who is a nightmare with other dogs unless he has a ball or frisbee wodged in his gob. My dog, who not so long ago I thought was a dog-aggressive bully, was physically shaking and trying to reverse onto my foot.
I read a great analogy on another forum, which I shall paraphrase
"A little old lady is about to step out in front of an articulated lorry - I grab her by the arm and jerk her back, rather than wave a bingo ticket in front of her nose to lure her back onto the pavement - does that make me a bad person?"![]()
Interesting. I disagree with her and the tone of her writing has put my back up, but interesting nonetheless.
I do agree with the comment about positive trainers being looked down upon. If one more person makes a snarky remark about bribery to me I will break both their arms and knot them behind their head - although in a very positive way, of course.![]()
It sounds like both "sides" think that the other looks down on them.
People have made snarky remarks to me while I've been out training, minding my own business... that kind of thing can wear a girl down and release her inner psycho. Normally it's the flat-cap brigade doing it. I think they assume that only 'pet' dogs are trained in this way, and look down upon it as a result
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The same attitude that reckons you can't train a retrieve to hand using a food reward
As you say, the longer the dog holds the dummy, the higher the reward surely?!
Probably - that and sheer ignorance I guess. The same attitude that reckons you can't train a retrieve to hand using a food reward - wrong, I have the proof asleep on my knee (he's had a hard weekend).
It seems that the USA is very black and white about these things - seemingly it's either totally reward-based with no correction, or plug 'em into the mains and zap them when they breathe wrong, am I right in saying this?
* Positive reinforcement: the adding of an appetitive stimulus to increase a certain behavior or response.
Example: Father gives candy to his daughter when she picks up her toys.
* Punishment (positive punishment): the adding of an aversive stimulus to decrease a certain behavior or response.
Example: Mother yells at a child when running into the street.
* Negative reinforcement: the taking of an aversive stimulus to increase certain behavior or response.
Example: Rolling up the window to block the wind.
* Negative punishment (omission training): the taking away of an appetitive stimulus to decrease a certain behavior.
Example: Taking away a night light when child does not go to bed.
On another note, I was pretty amazed watching that channel 5 dog programme recently to see in the bit about assistance dogs in the US that they all seemed to be wearing prong collars. What's all that about?!
All training is basically operant conditioning, which means using consequences to influence behaviour. There are four types of reinforcement you can use (nicked off wikipedia because I always get them muddled):
* Positive reinforcement: the adding of an appetitive stimulus to increase a certain behavior or response.
Example: Father gives candy to his daughter when she picks up her toys.
* Punishment (positive punishment): the adding of an aversive stimulus to decrease a certain behavior or response.
Example: Mother yells at a child when running into the street.
* Negative reinforcement: the taking of an aversive stimulus to increase certain behavior or response.
Example: Rolling up the window to block the wind.
* Negative punishment (omission training): the taking away of an appetitive stimulus to decrease a certain behavior.
Example: Taking away a night light when child does not go to bed.
So, some people use negative reinforcement for training retrievers - i.e. the dummy hits the floor, the dog gets zapped with an e-collar / has its ear yanked or something equally unpleasant, and this only stops when the dog has delivered the retrieve. Yes, you'll get your dummy back, but are you a team? Is your dog enjoying its work? Personally, I would think not...