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

Click vs. Word: Calming a Stressed Dog

By KPCT
Created 2003-03-01 02:00

From  Sophie S.:

Last week I noticed another situation in which there is a distinct difference between clicker training [0] (using a marker signal!) and giving goodies without a clear-cut signal: calming a stressed dog.

Let me give you an example. I've been a clicker [0] trainer for about three years now, but I never clicked my aunt's shepherd-Doberman mix (now 10 years old). Mascha's history is this: My aunt saved her from being put down, because her previous owner wanted to get rid of her. She was then six months old. He also probably hit her.

I always gave Mascha treats without a click for stuff she already knew. But it was really no fun, because any command made her so stressed. When for example I told her to lie down she was especially nervous and often she broke the down. When I gave her commands, even though she already knew what they meant, she became so nervous, she rolled on her back and started to whine.

Last Xmas I decided to start clicker training her. I clicked her for sitting and I lured her down a few times and then clicked her for offering me this position. However I never gave her the learned commands! In one session she was able to stay down even when I put food right next to her on the floor; at the same time I clicked her for looking into my eyes. I know some normal dogs that get stressed during this exercise, but she didn't show me any sign of stress, she even really enjoyed the whole process!

The next time I saw her—on April 12th—she greeted me with a sit! (Usually she nearly knocks me down the stairs.) When I took her for a walk she repeatedly crashed down at my feet, offering me the down I had taught her three and a half months earlier. And she was happy!

I think clicker training was so helpful for her because:


Karen Pryor says: I think this is a good example of a dog that has experienced "poisoned" cues. The command "sit" or "down" might be followed by praise, but it also might have been followed by punishment [0] (probably the owner sometimes corrected the sit or down that he got, because it was too slow or for some other reason.) As a pup, therefore, the dog had learned the behaviors but had not been able to tell, predictably, whether the outcome of doing them would be okay (praise) or something awful; so the commands themselves became conditioned punishers. Re-shaping the behavior [0] without correction [0], and adding a different cue, again without correction, enabled the animal to give the same responses without fear-for the first time in ten years.


Source URL:
http://www.clickertraining.com/node/251