cobmum
Well-Known Member
Do you agree that horses will mostly always learn from the release of pressure not the pressure itself?
Yes I believe the pressure motivates, the release teaches that that was the right response....
Yes I believe the pressure motivates, the release teaches that that was the right response....
I don't like the example of tight shoes.
To be working at the optimum, the pressure needs to be as light as you can make it and the release as rapid.
The release is its own reward, but I see the advantages of a targeted reward.
Blurr, I find understanding what I'm doing much simpler by avoiding anthropomorphic parallels.
It's a mixture of positive and negative reinforcement.I posted a query on a similar thread which I don't think anyone answered.
A trainer is trying to teach a foal to lead. So he/she applies pressure on the head collar while simultaneously offering a slice of carrot.
Now, is that positive reinforcement or negative reinforcement when the foal moves forward?
Er... not 'success', that's for sure!And what's it called if nothing happens?
Presumably this increased the pressure on the foal to the point where its reluctance to move (despite the pull on the headcollar and the lure of the carrot) was overcome. Does the foal get the carrot now?Just to add a bit of spice to the question, at the split second the trainer applies pressure and offers a carrot, his/her assistant moves towards the foal's rear end. If the foal moves now, what is it called? And if it doesn't?
No of course they don't. They only matter if you want to talk about what you did with other people who use obscure and confusing phrases like 'negative reinforcement'!On the other hand, do the definitions really matter so long as the foal learns to lead??I suspect I'll get there a lot sooner without wasting my time talking about it!
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It's a mixture of positive and negative reinforcement.At least, if the foal learns to move forward. If its behaviour doesn't change, then nothing was reinforced.
Er... not 'success', that's for sure!
Presumably this increased the pressure on the foal to the point where its reluctance to move (despite the pull on the headcollar and the lure of the carrot) was overcome. Does the foal get the carrot now?
No of course they don't. They only matter if you want to talk about what you did with other people who use obscure and confusing phrases like 'negative reinforcement'!![]()
There are them that do and others who just talk about it.![]()
So eye contact with a horse (or other animal) cannot be pressure??
I do think the definitions are confusing the issue! Who cares what you call it? If it works, it works.
I don't understand the problem of "anthropomorphising" either. In these examples, we are not making the huge leap of assuming that animals think like humans but taking cause-and-effect back to fundamentals where they apply to most forms of animal life.
I'd call eye contact pressure.
I think that the examples peoiple use when "anthropomorphising" are poor and confusing.
I'm not really bothered about the academic aspect of behaviour, I need to be able to get it right from a saddle, not a desk chair.![]()
PR, you know, I think we agree. But it seems a waste of time trying to discuss it here."Shutting down" might be the next interesting thing to discuss -- illustrated with a few anthropomorphicalogical examples from HHO!
I have a very interesting book here you'd enjoy. Or perhaps not. It is "Animal Behavior: An Evolutionary Approach", by John Alcock, published by Sinauer Associates, ISBN 0-87893-022-1. But then it doesn't discuss horses.... Your local public library should be able to find you a copy through Inter-Library Loan.
Knowledge enables one to try different solutions to solving a problem. So, rather than beating a horse to get it to load, modern knowledge tells us there may be a better way. You can never have enough knowledge, even though you might think much of it is irrelevant at the time. There is an old Chinese saying, "A wise man can even learn from a fool". To which I will quickly add, "The fool doth think he is wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool" (As You Like It).![]()