Clicker Training in the Greater Phoenix Area By Gary Wilkes

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Jack Palance vs. Fred Astaire

There is a classic scene in western movies where the villain (personified by Jack  Palance in "Shane", a scene  reprised in Clint Eastwood's "Pale Rider and countless other western movies.) commands the lowly sod buster to  "dance". Invariably  the  means of enforcing this request is with a burst of bullets from a "six-gun" (usually exceeding  six shots) aimed at the farmer's feet. The hapless plow-boy then buck-jumps and hops  his way through a grotesque imitation of Fred Astaire. While this is certainly not the way most people would suggest training a human to do  anything, that's exactly how most dogs are trained to do everything.

 The process of teaching a behavior by getting a critter to avoid something is called aversive control. There are two  types of aversive control, punishment and negative  reinforcement. Punishment causes behavior to decrease, while negative reinforcement causes behavior to increase. The more technical scientific definitions  of these terms are  pretty confusing, but these simple descriptions are good enough for most situations.

Punishment is something we are all familiar with, but few people really understand  how punishment works. For  example, imagine  that your dog Fido chews a couch cushion while you are away from home. When you return and see the damage, you  shove the cushion in Fido's face (to show him why he is being punished) and swat him with  a  rolled up newspaper. The next time you come home, another pillow is  damaged, but as soon as you see it, Fido looks "guilty" and ducks under the couch. You drag him out and bop him again, since his guilty look insures that he  "knew he did something wrong. "

 If this looks like a good example of punishment, think again. By definition, punishment causes behavior to decrease.  In our example, the swats did not cause  Fido to stop ripping up pillows, therefore the swats did not punish the act  of ripping up pillows. Fido's owner can escalate the intensity of the "punishment" until  it injures his dog but will not be able to stop the pillow ripping. That is because he is actually using negative reinforcement.

 Things which  increase behavior through force, intimidation, fear or avoidance are  called negative reinforcers. If you sit on a thumbtack, the pain associated with the tack is a negative reinforcer, which causes you  to do a behavior --  "jumping  upward." The key difference between a reinforcer and a punisher is that one increases behavior, while the other one decreases behavior. In the case of our  couch chewing canine, the swats and scolding did not affect the  bad behavior at all. What actually happened was Fido's tendency to hide under the couch and look  "guilty" increased because of the harsh treatment. Those behaviors were negatively reinforced - meaning strengthened by something nasty. Unless the human can connect the nastiness with the actual behavior that needs  to be controlled, the guilty looks and escape behaviors are the only ones that will be changed. .

 If your forehead is smoking from brain overload, do not despair. While this  distinction  between punishment and negative reinforcement is alien to us, it is not all that difficult to understand - but it is important. Unless you understand the  difference,  you can both physically and mentally hurt your pet through the misuse of aversive control.

For example, a woman called me recently and told me that her dog had a problem  with barking. Each time the dog  barked, she would faithfully go outside and swat the dog with a newspaper. She did this because she assumed that it would "punish"  or reduce the behavior. Three years of this process had not changed the amount of barking. The  woman could not understand why the dog didn't stop barking. She  said that the dog knew the behavior was wrong, because she would close her eyes and cringe, in anticipation of the swat. From our new perspective, the  answer is  simple. The newspaper didn't punish (decrease) barking, it negatively reinforced (increased) cringing behavior.

According to B.F. Skinner, the great behavioral psychologist, most behavior is  controlled by its consequences. If  there is an obvious connection between behavior (walking into a brick wall) and a consequence (striking your nose) you are  unlikely to walk into brick walls, in the future. The problem for most pet owners is failing to understand  how to make a connection that an animal can easily  understand. In many situations, the connection is only apparent to the pet owner. Rubbing an animal's nose against a couch and then applying a swat with a  newspaper is unlikely  to punish couch chewing behavior.  The more likely result is to increase behaviors such as escaping or cringing.

While most of our experience with behavioral control relates to punishment, we  rarely achieve our goals. If   punishment is applied repeatedly without any change in the behavior, it simply isn't working. If catch yourself using punishment without making sure it is effective, "you should know you have done wrong." To pay  for your error, take a section of the newspaper and roll it into a tight tube.  Next, rub your nose in it and swat yourself forcefully – get the message?

 Note: If you need to learn how to stop unwanted behaviors and don't want to end up scaring your dog to no purpose, check out the "Doggie Repair Kit" -- it's well worth the investment.

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