Archive for the Pets Category

As a relatively new dog owner, I’ve been reading up a lot on animal training, which naturally lead me into reading about animal behavior studies, and taking dog training classes.  What’s ground-breaking for me in all of this is how much behavioral training research applies equally to humans as it does dogs.  It’s all about reinforcement.  And–no surprise–there is both negative AND positive reinforcement. 

I recently read Patricia McConnell’s The Other End of the Leash.  McConnell has a PhD in zoology (animal behavior), and runs a dog-training facility as well as acts as a personal consultant for difficult dogs.  She actually uses her own Border Collies as therapy dogs to help solve problems in other dogs.  Her book is just a plain fascinating read: it offers enlightening stories (and photos) throughout, as well as insight into how dogs perceive the world, and how that perception is so different from our own.  But the important message of the book is how as humans we are so ingrained in our communication styles that we think every other being must surely understand our intent.  It made me realize how much we do this with other humans!   For example, McConnell shows how, as apes, we great each other face-to-face and reach toward each other to grasp hands in greeting.  She shows some great chimp photos of this very behavior to back her point.  Then, she shows how dogs greet each other.  Well, if you’ve owned or been around a dog at all, you know that dogs’ greeting styles differ drastically from our own.  But, the interesting part is that direct eye contact is considered aggressive in dog-speak, and directly facing and leaning forward and over a dog is dominant. So, put all of these "signals" together as we commonly do when greeting a dog, and you have one aggressive initial greeting! McConnell shows enough photos of this action to demo that dogs just tolerate our clumsiness. (Cats, as we know, tolerate nothing.)  

Still, the book changed how I thought of dogs versus other pet animals, like cats and birds.  I used to think that dogs naturally interacted more like humans, and that cats and birds (I used to own an African Grey parrot) needed a different style entirely.  I now understand that dogs have the same human greeting preference as cats!  Imagine that!  They prefer an indirect greeting.  They prefer to be the one to initiate approach, and they don’t like a hand moving right toward their head, and they even prefer a scratch under the chin, chest, or side of face.  Just - like - a - cat.  And an African Grey Parrot (except that Grey’s like their feathers rubbed backwards on their head after they know you…but it’s clearly a sign of acceptance on their part–you just don’t rush anything with a beak that can break fingers).

I love behavior books like these, because they get you thinking about all animals, and where there is a fundamental commonality to all of our behavior, and where it differs. So in my recent quest for understanding, I looked up Karen Pryor on Amazon and found her book

Don’t Shoot the Dog

From the reviews, the book isn’t so much about specific species behavior, but about behavioral psychology in general; stuff I find fascinating regardless of the pet I have.  Karen Pryor is a renowned dolphin trainer and developed the clicker method for her dolphin training.  So if you want to get a book about that specific method, that’s not the one.  Don’t Shoot the Dog is more about behavioral shaping.    The book is on its way to me now, and in the meantime, here is another review from a reader you might find interesting:

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I thought I’d write a nice chronicle of the morning’s events with Buck and Bart.  One’s my dog, the other my cat.  It’s pretty cute watching their relationship as "friends" evolve, but pictures say it all, so link to my photo album and watch their playful antics.

http://picasaweb.google.com/FerntreeDesign/BartAndBuck