smolmaus
Well-Known Member
My cat trains me with positive punishment (she puts her claws in my face until I give her space on the pillow) 
I have had this issue also and reducing the value of the reward helped. We moved from actual treats to dry grass nuts. It has to be a "nice to have" and not a "must have" or yes, exactly as you've seen the horse can't focus on the question. That, in combination with more frequent breaks for thinking, made a big difference.Unfortunately when the trainers like SY get called in it's really last resort. And they cost a lot of money and people want results. I did clicker training really successfully for some things she thought would be scary but wasnt with my old horse. She was big and bargey and loud in her actions. I had to mix with her and when she was in a boisterous mood just manage somehow.
I now have a super sensitive, not very confident 10 year old mare who is petrified of everything and wondering whether this would work. For food though she just does something quickly for the reward so is focusing on treats so I am pondering next steps.
She might be a lost cause, you can throw rug on her 100 times and 101 she utterly freaks out and nothing is different. I don't think I got told the full story when I bought her
I think the clarity of the click was the difference there. I got the timing absolutely perfect a few times and that was it. A "good girl" does function as a bridge signal and scratches as your reward so the idea is the exact same but for things you might want to capture a single short moment, I really like the clear and consistent click.I imagine that the positive reinforcement is getting the nice think albeit brush or play rather than food. I've bought a book on R+ but I really think I'm the sort of person who needs someone to come out and show me. I'm quite intrigued about the ridden stuff you're doing @smolmaus as softening and relaxing the neck and into the contact is something we've been working on and I just do a lot of praise and neck scratches when she softens.
Absolutely! This is where my anti-SY sentiment comes backIll reduce and basically feed her her balancer to see if it makes a difference . She doesn't really like being touched so scratches are not a reward. I suspect just backing off is better. Early days!
Yes I've managed to do this a few times she loves a reinback when she doesn't quite understand what I wantI think the clarity of the click was the difference there. I got the timing absolutely perfect a few times and that was it. A "good girl" does function as a bridge signal and scratches as your reward so the idea is the exact same but for things you might want to capture a single short moment, I really like the clear and consistent click.
HOWEVER last night, I thought I was marking for a lateral flexion ONCE and what I got for the next 5 minutes was "you want me to fall out through my shoulder? Cool, no worries, can do that all day"so uh, yeah, gotta be careful
my cat probably does similar however it weighs about 4kg and if it punishes me too much I can chuck it on the ground and remain quite safe. The horse in that video would punish you with 700kg of it's hind feet and it would be A & E.My cat trains me with positive punishment (she puts her claws in my face until I give her space on the pillow)![]()
which is why I was asking for people to educate me as to how they would deal with this using R+ (and food)Horses are already food orientated. If you instill basic manners and politeness around food rewards any potential issues are manageable. You have a lack of knowledge in this area, so you aren't aware that that is always the very first step.
In this case I think SV has looked for causes and this is his management solution. Agree or not, this is one management method for this problem. I guess that what you mean by equine behaviourist I mean by horseman. I'm not discussing the video specifically I was simply asking those on this thread who advocated R + how, using their method they would deal with this particular horse.It is not "people" saying that about SY, it is me personally. And I also already said my why quite clearly. He doesn't look for causes or management solutions, only how to stop symptoms and I have no interest in that approach. You can Google what an equine behaviourist is if you don't know. But by qualifications I mean formal education, professional accreditation and regular CPD requirements to maintain that accreditation. That will involve "on the ground" experience by necessity as that is their job. You would (hopefully) know what I meant if I said "qualified physiotherapist" rather than "bodyworker".
Maybe you should start your own thread if you want people to discuss that video specifically. It has no relevance to positive reinforcement or clicker training.
thank you for your replyI will preface this by saying that I've only watched about 10min of the video, I don't have the time to watch it all.
Horses are food orientated naturally, food is a primary reinforcement because it is essential to survival. You will not find a not food orientated horse unless it's very ill. Some horses will be more food orientated than others (the "greedy" ones) and all horses will be more or less food orientated at a given time depending on how hungry they are and what else might be more interesting around (mare in season / huge predatory farm machinery that might eat them, etc...). R+ is not limited to food, but food is easy because a) it's a primary reinforcer and therefore has strong value b) easier to use than the two other primary reinforcers (social interaction and sex). You can use a secondary reinforcer such as scratches, but you need to be sure your horse actually enjoys them, or your wasting your time (scratches will likely be aversive for a feral for example, so instead of rewarding, you would be flooding)
Using food rewards is the same as using any form of reinforcement, it's all in the timing. If you mess up the timing, you are not reinforcing what you want, whether that's giving a treat when your horse shoves you aside to reach your pouch or carrying on pulling on the lead rope when the horse has put it's foot on the ramp of the trailer. There are scientific studies in peer reviewed papers showing the effectiveness of food-based R+ and showing that it does not in itself encourage biting (that would be the bad timing) - sorry, not feeling like searching for them, but a quick search on google scholar should bring them up.
For the horse in the video (based on the first 10 min and assuming it didn't do itself any brain damage in it's accident as a youngster), to train it to lead using R+, I would:
Teach him the association "click" / treat, in the stable with me on the outside of the door
Teach him to touch a target with his nose from outside the stable
Use the target to get him to move away from the door of the stable while I open and close it (by getting him to touch it with his nose further from the door)
Use the target to get him to move around the stable
Use the target to teach him to put his head into the headcollar on his own
with headcollar and lead rope on, use the target to move him around the stable
Same again but in the barn
Same again, but outside
Start varying environment for leading
Fade out target
fade out food rewards, until they are infrequent and irregular
I would in parallel, teach him to give to pressure on the headcollar, using R+: small pressure on the headcollar, if he gives, reward. If he doesn't give, you release the pressure anyway (so that it doesn't become pressure-release if you want stay strictly R+) and try again a few seconds later.
I will also add that, I'm not a strictly R+ person (as far as I know, no one can truly be all the time), but if you can use R+ to teach dolphins to jump through hoops, elephants to have their feet sorted and lions to go to their marker, there is no reason you can't use it to teach a horse to lead (or do anything really - though I will admit it may take some thinking for the best way to achieve your results)
i'm sorry for intruding on your thread. I thought all threads were for all posters. I am not demanding simply asking how your training would used and work on this sort of horse. Yes he is unruly and dangerous which is why I asked for the benefits of R+ on this sort of problem. It is clear that posters here dismiss the method shown in that video of pressure and release as being disliked/ unacceptable/unjustified or whatever else so I don't feel it unseasonable to ask about R+.Perhaps because you've chosen to come onto a thread where we've all been peacefully and happily comparing our training techniques and progress (and absolutely not preaching that R+ is the only way, quite the opposite in fact) and demanded we explain to you how to train an unruly and dangerous horse using R+?!
I use pressure and release all the time, I have lots of time and respect for a large number of pressure and release and other types of trainer, a good trainer is a good trainer, whatever (non abusive) method they use. I wouldn't personally include SY in that category as I think there are many other people that do what he does, better. But I know lots of people really rate him and he does get results.
I've used R+ on 4 different horses over about 15 years now. All of them would have been considered extremely polite to handle. However, I confess that I have never, and would never, deal with something as difficult as the horse in the video. Why would I when this is my hobby and supposed to be fun?!
You are not going to get that answer.
Itās not clear amongst R+ proponents exactly what is meant by this, or quite how to clearly distinguish from aversivity, pressure, release, negative reinforcement, all the rest, when used in practical application - multiple posts, eg 75. Clearly some very good results, clearly some confusion.
Iām all for a bit of bribery, for defusing situations and keeping reasonably safe, particularly anyone faced with an over-confident, ignorant and disrespectful large animal, where clearly what works is what is required.
Do I think the videoād cobās owner will be able to make anything of it? Using R+, or any other methodologies for that matter? Unlikely, it will be passed to another trainer and/ or sold on, hopefully not destroyed because itās obviously got potential, but happens a lot when owners canāt cope, even well-meaning ones.
Of course horses need confident and well judged leadership and discipline. Using R+ is not a barrier to this. As I stated above, no matter your method of training you need good timing and also self discipline. If you're lacking either of those things, your training is going to be dodgy at best. I volunteer dog train, where R+ is a respected and well used tool (the horse world is a bit behind when it comes to moving with the times and the science), and I have volunteered in two different clubs, one of which was a lot more of a "pressure-release" kind of place (the reason I left). In both cases, either yanking on the dog's lead or giving it treats, if the owner was not doing it at right moment, it didn't have the desired effect. Yank on the lead too often and forget to release it when the dog is beside you and the dog decides it may as well just keep on pulling, because it's the same whatever its position is in relation to the owner. Fumble around in your zipped pocket to find the plastic poly bag with the bits of ham in and fish one out when your dog looks at you, and by the time you've got the treat, the dog has wandered off again; chance missed. When I was toilet training my puppy, every time she peed on my carpet, it's because I'd messed up and not taken her out often enough. To get the result I wanted, I needed to get stricter... on myself.To my mind horses like and benefit from strong, confident and well ljudged leadership along with discipline. That way they feel safe and happy. It does concern me that in modern horse life a behaviourist with qualifications is apparently needed. What grooms and riders knew (or worked out) in the past now needs qualifications.
Is it clear?! Pretty much every poster has said they use a variety of methods, including pressure and release, among others. No-one has dismissed P&R as a valid training technique, a couple of us have expressed that we don't believe SY is the best user of it we've ever seen. I think it's perfectly useful in lots of situations, sometimes the preferred method.i'm sorry for intruding on your thread. I thought all threads were for all posters. I am not demanding simply asking how your training would used and work on this sort of horse. Yes he is unruly and dangerous which is why I asked for the benefits of R+ on this sort of problem. It is clear that posters here dismiss the method shown in that video of pressure and release as being disliked/ unacceptable/unjustified or whatever else so I don't feel it unseasonable to ask about R+.
I looked this up as I was unfamiliar with them. The ones I looked up were the society of equine behaviour consultants. I was a bit surprised. briefly there were 3 levels. first you needed a CV, 2 references, a portfolio which was considered by the exam board. there was a written and oral paper. a practical exam to test your knowledge of equine behaviour. A lot could be done by remote learning training online. There were additional optional group sessions as various venues. Level 2 you had to do level one and have a degree. Not sure what use a degree would be other than equine science which it did not specify. Level 3 you had to do level one and basically be a vet.I think the "qualified" part is important to mention, because behaviourist is not a protected term. Anyone can set up as one, so you would ideally want to check qualifications, experience and recommendations as you would do for a saddle fitter or a farrier. Their results will be more important than their qualifications, but you need something to start on.
certainly interesing learning more but for me personally I would see it as too stressful with food so involved. I don't see food coming into it as being natural horse behaviour. ie how they relate to each otherBut you could open your mind and add another training technique to the box if you wanted to.
I agree with you on this. However I'm always interested in find out about other ways so that I can make an informed decision. I have no ill feeling towards R+ but, currently, it does not reconcile in my thoughts with how prey animals like horses learn and interact. This may change as I have changed my mind and ways many a time over the preceeding decades.certainly interesing learning more but for me personally I would see it as too stressful with food so involved. I don't see food coming into it as being natural horse behaviour. ie how they relate to each other
Tbh youāre not going to get a detailed assessment of this horse from me because I just donāt have the time to watch the whole video and form an opinion of him.to my mind this is a young and very strong horse who has a total and utter lack of respect for people, couldn't care less if he is in their space. I don't want to put blame on anyone but for me I would look at it that he has been allowed to get away with whatever he likes especially based on his strength. Realising there were no consequences he basically just took over. I suspect that if someone, possibly female, went into his stable with lots of treats, a grooming brush and wanted to stroke and scratch him he would put up with it for food. It wouldn't of course be safe for her but he would tolerate it for what he could get. He's not nasty in any way he has just been totally allowed to do as he wants. He sees the girl's fear and has no respect for it.
Do other people read him that way? leaving aside whatever anyone has done with their own horses if you were given this particular horse how would you go about it, not in general but your actual movements. I would like to see how people would deal with it safely without using pressure and release based on the exact facilities this trainer had.
especially interested that you think this is a good candidate for R +, I don't see he has got used to fighting pressure and winning but that he has learnt through lack of early training'discipline that his handler has no personal space. He has in fact been taught (or at least he has taught himself) by poor handling to walk over people.
This pressure based trainer didn't set the horse up to fail, in this case the owner did that. The trainer just ended up with the problem.
It would be interesting to hear all methods of dealing with him or even how people read him.
I've not watched the video, just the beginning, but things that a R+ trainer might look into include: reinforcement of alternative/incompatible behaviours (e.g., a horse can't nip you when you put their headcollar on, if you reward them to put their nose through it themselves) or target training (give a horse markers to focus on and stop at, to try to break the behaviour pattern of running towards home).
When I say SY 'set him up to fail', I mean he asked the horse to do behaviours that the horse is presently incapable of doing safely, behaviours that should be simple but that the horse struggles with.This pressure based trainer didn't set the horse up to fail, in this case the owner did that.
So none of this talk of aversives, reinforcement, etc is R+ specific. Itās all part of operant conditioning, and behaviourist learning theory as a result. You don't have to be a R+ proponent to think about operant conditioning - I know some dog trainers who use a lot of punishment and negative reinforcement but who would be equally happy to have this conversation.Itās not clear amongst R+ proponents exactly what is meant by this, or quite how to clearly distinguish from aversivity, pressure, release, negative reinforcement, all the rest, when used in practical application - multiple posts, eg 75. Clearly some very good results, clearly some confusion.
If it worked for 60s police horse trainers...If a pat works, why wouldn't food work?
It IS fun to think about and ponder and puzzle!!! What am I supposed to be mulling over on the drive home? Stock prices? What my pension pot is doing?And nerds like smolmaus and I enjoy getting bogged down in the details, debating whether something is negative reinforcement or positive punishment, positive reinforcement or negative reinforcement or both.
Food can be very helpful, can certainly play a role in horse training; for a pleasant association, a reward, a bribe, a distraction, etc; but itās less evident that the horses always distinguish which rationale, so long as they get to eat it.If it worked for 60s police horse trainers...
The start of R+ was a rat getting food pellets for pressing a lever. So no, itās not a ādistortion of the original theoretical principlesā for R+ trainers today to use food. Food has been the predominant reward in animal training with R+, from dolphins to circus animals, since the development of operant conditioning.Food can be very helpful, can certainly play a role in horse training; for a pleasant association, a reward, a bribe, a distraction, etc; but itās less evident that the horses always distinguish which rationale, so long as they get to eat it.
The R+ discussed on here is overwhelmingly food focused - possibly this is a distortion of the original theoretical principles? - lengthy discussions of high versus low value snacks, snack ingredients, continuous feeding, various pouches / storage solutions for snacksā¦.
police training uses many other techniques, and a methodology with such heavy reliance on āsnacksā can create all sorts of other issues.
Do you think your horse thinks you are a horse? Do you think the lion thinks the zookeeper is a lion?certainly interesing learning more but for me personally I would see it as too stressful with food so involved. I don't see food coming into it as being natural horse behaviour. ie how they relate to each other
Composing a long stupid post in my head about how we need mutual co-operation communist communes immediately as the concept of money used as bribes and rewards is so far removed from our natural behaviour as primates.Do you think your horse thinks you are a horse? Do you think the lion thinks the zookeeper is a lion?
What a lovely horse!I thought Iād share two videos of different approaches with Oliver. I donāt use IG much but have put on there to share.
With Jason Webb
With me under Tracey Duncan on a long weekend with her. Our second day never done liberty before.
Hope this doesn't muddy the waters further lol but I want to be a NERD and I think you can differentiate between the development of how to apply operant conditioning as training, and the study of it as just how all creatures, even plants!, learn and adapt. The natural environment applies consequences to behaviour that shape future behaviour. The four quadrants were not created but rather described by Skinner, as observations.The start of R+ was a rat getting food pellets for pressing a lever. So no, itās not a ādistortion of the original theoretical principlesā for R+ trainers today to use food. Food has been the predominant reward in animal training with R+, from dolphins to circus animals, since the development of operant conditioning.
R+ training with animals (less so with humans) is generally food-based because food is a valuable reward to most animals and because it enables you to be very precise in your training. However, you will also find references to using scratches and the Premack principle as reinforcers in this thread - neither of which involve food. I certainly donāt advocate for people using food as their only reinforcer.
And, again, no one on this thread only uses food in training. No one on this thread uses only R+. Everyone that has contributed to this thread uses pressure and release just like you do.
To be frank, there is plenty of scrutiny of R+ on this forum already. I created this thread so that those of us who enjoy using it could have a place to talk about it without getting the constant judgement from others. I have tried to discuss yours and paddy555ās judgements fairly, but I note that you have completely ignored my response to your previous criticisms. Thatās your perogative, but, given that your goal seems to be judgement rather than open-minded discussion, I would really appreciate if you found another thread to do so.
What a difference! And what an absolutely beautiful boy!I thought Iād share two videos of different approaches with Oliver. I donāt use IG much but have put on there to share.
With Jason Webb
With me under Tracey Duncan on a long weekend with her. Our second day never done liberty before.
I only know this second hand from discussions at a liberty workshop (with my own trainer) but I think a lot of liberty (as in the performance type) is pressure-release based (Parelli was brought up as an example) and not R+. If Ben has moved to R+ that would be interesting as the last time I heard him speak about his training it seemed fairly traditional.What a lovely horse!
That's interesting that you wouldn't recommend JW, he is one that I have always thought looked very good and effective. Good to to have first hand reports. I also really like Tristan Tucker so a shame that TRT wasn't effective for you.
He looks really good in your liberty video, I don't know much about how the liberty trainers train, Ben Atkinson seems to use a bridge signal and food but I don't know if that's typical?
Did you find the techniques easy to implement and continue at home?
My comment about Ben was just based on a couple of clips I've seen so I may well be wrong. I also really like Connie Colfox, she doesn't have a slick SM presence but I like the output of her training and she had a great rep years ago when I lived down her way. She takes in quite a few competition horses with various issues and tries a different way with them.What a difference! And what an absolutely beautiful boy!
Outside of the snapshot of results, what were your feelings on the two different approaches? As Matafleur says, JW has a decent enough reputation and I'm sure his methods are effective, but I would be interested to know what you feel the primary differences were.
I only know this second hand from discussions at a liberty workshop (with my own trainer) but I think a lot of liberty (as in the performance type) is pressure-release based (Parelli was brought up as an example) and not R+. If Ben has moved to R+ that would be interesting as the last time I heard him speak about his training it seemed fairly traditional.