Dog Training - Dog Psychology
Even dumb dogs are clever. Just think of the many ways they
get humans to do what they want. Few can resist the soulful
eyes and the offered paw when eating something the dog also
views as tasty.
One of the reasons for the many-thousand year association
between humans and dogs is the latter's great capacity for
communicating in terms the former can understand. How often has
your canine companion delivered a tennis ball with a look that
you unerringly interpret as 'time for fetch'?
These are only two examples out of many that show dogs have
a great capacity for learning complex behavior.
Dogs can understand a surprising amount of language and body
posture, but they process information very differently from
humans.
Their eyes respond very differently to colors and have a
greater ability to see in low light. Their head muscles allow
them to rotate their ears in order to quickly and accurately
locate the precise source of sounds. And, of course, there's
that famous sense of smell.
The differences continue on other levels of mental
functioning. Dogs understand cause-effect relationships very
unlike their human companions.
Classical conditioning - associating a
stimulus with a response - can be much more readily surmounted
in humans. Humans are much better at changing an undesired
response to a car accident or a trip to the doctor. Those
associations are much more persistent in dogs.
Operant conditioning - grasping naturally
related cause-effect relationships, usually through positive
and negative reinforcement - is even more different between the
two species.
I always exit the rear door with my Golden Retrievers when
we're going to play fetch. When I do, we invariably do actually
play. By contrast, a hundred times I let them out the side
door, where I never follow them. Instead, I leave them alone
for half an hour or more. Yet they still go immediately to the
back door where they expect a game to follow.
I clearly associated a specific tone and word and a unique
hand gesture with every command. In consequence, they learn a
wide variety of selected behaviors. They can sit, stay, down,
come, roll-over, no-bite, fetch and release, even eliminate on
command.
Yet telling them repeatedly not to eat things off the ground
that their own experience continually shows them leads to upset
stomachs is a waste of effort. They'll repeat the same unwanted
behavior the first time they can. They simply can't grasp some
effects when the cause is much earlier in time.
The lesson from these examples is this. Your companion,
whether Retriever or Shepherd, Dachshund or Basset Hound can
learn an astounding variety of things, provided you don't
expect the unreasonable.
One woman well-known on the show circuit has trained her
friend to perform a complex, several-minutes long dance
routine. Search-and-rescue dogs have been trained to pull
children from rivers and skiers from avalanches. Service dogs
can open a door and pull a wheelchair or fetch a container of
water without spilling a drop.
But don't expect them to think like humans, even when
trained to emulate us. No matter how many times you tell them
not to, they'll continue to eat grass.
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