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Published on Karen Pryor Clickertraining (http://www.clickertraining.com)

A Swinging Pair: Using Paired Cues to Accelerate Learning

By Karen Pryor
Created 2003-04-01 02:00

Train two behaviors at once? Teach two cues simultaneously? How? Why? Teaching certain cues in pairs can speed up the learning process, as well as teaching a dog a concept that it can apply to new learning.

Choose two behaviors that are opposites: step forward/step backward, over/under, and paw/nose, for example. Click and treat them alternately so that the very clear difference between the behaviors, and their cues, becomes one more piece of information for the dog. Teaching a dog discrimination by training paired, opposite behaviors moves learning along so quickly, you may find yourself establishing behaviors and cues in a single session.

To do so, however, you need to capture or provoke two distinct behaviors. Take the paired, opposite behaviors of bark/quiet. To put both on cue [0] quickly and simultaneously, try the following steps:

So, what's happening? You are provoking the behavior of barking (or, better yet, the dog is barking spontaneously), and you are reinforcing it. You are then provoking another, opposite behavior, and reinforcing it. There are no cues established yet; just two opposite behaviors which you are clicking and treating alternately.

Note that you are not alternately clicking and reinforcing barking and the absence of barking. Paired cues work not as present/absent cues, but do this/do that cues. In the case of Bark/Quiet, you are reinforcing barking and its opposite, the tiny response of surprise however your dog expressed it-a flinch or head turn or lifted ear-that you provoked with a "Stop" hand signal. The dog may have perceived it as "Close my mouth" or "Turn my head" (with mouth closed as part of it) or "Duck" or "Look worried" or whatever it was doing that was marked by the click and earned the reinforcer [0]. But it definitely did something, and you clicked that something.

What's next?

At ClickerExpo Chicago [0], Ken Ramirez [0], director of training at the Shedd Aquarium, explained how the marine mammal trainers routinely use paired cues to give instructions to the dolphins and whales. He pointed out that the first pair may be slower to train, but by the time the animal has learned three pairs, it gains the concept of alternates: Do this on A, do that on B. From that point forward you can teach new pairs, any pair, quite quickly. If you were training for competition, you might select for the first pair of behaviors something easily done around the house, 'come forward/go backward' perhaps, so that the concept of A, then B, becomes well-learned by the dog. Then when you need the dog to respond to paired cues in an important situation, you can build on his established understanding.

Other behaviors that are learned well in conjunction are come forward/go backward and nose/paw (touch a target [0] with the nose, touch it with the paw). You can teach big/little (teach the dog to target a big object and a little object) or black/white. Over/under also works well. Left/right are extremely useful in agility and freestyle. Kay Laurence [0]'s students in England train a lot of paired cues to use as parts of other behaviors as they design free-style routines, teach scent work, service work, and in any kind of behavior to be done at a distance. (By the way, Kay is of the opinion that dogs have trouble hearing the difference between "left" and "right" in English. She uses tick-tock or pink-blue or some other pairing of cues. Whether this is vital or not for the dog, it is good for the trainer as being forced to remember something non-obvious helps you to keep your cues consistent and accurate.)

If you have a bunch of paired cues that are nice and clean, try stacking them. "Paw" (not "nose") plus "left" (not "right") plus "push" (not "touch") equals a dog that will go out and tap the left-hand target hard enough to knock it down.

And, send us a note [1] to let us know how your paired-cue training sessions are going!

About the author Karen Pryor is the founder and CEO of Karen Pryor Clickertraining [2], and the author of many books including Don't Shoot the Dog [2]. Learn more about Karen Pryor [2] or read Karen's Letters [2] online.

Source URL:
http://www.clickertraining.com/node/169