Just for fun - video of Z and I clicking!

    • Gold Top Dog

    Well get off your butt then! ;)  perhaps we will have agility vids in a few weeks; Z starts her first agility class TONIGHT! (but it's at 7:30 so won't have much light to film yet)  We'll get to put her targeting skills to the test. :)

    • Gold Top Dog

     Cool!  I look forward to getting to learn all that again with a new dog.  We begin agility classes April 7th, though I have a couple privates scheduled before then.  I like teaching because it really helps hone my own skills!

    Maybe tonight I can get them uploaded.  I have the night OFF for the first time in several weeks.  Yay!! 

    • Gold Top Dog

    Ok!  Critique away!

    Shadow's first try at touch stick.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lRVl3VGW2Q0 

    Kota's first session. 

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KLrWaLic9sA


    Pepper's first....

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Tg8mJssEfU 

    I didn't think to record them until after I'd done Tasha, so I don't have one of her. 

    • Gold Top Dog

    Shadow: Very clean and efficient overall!  I would probably have tried to up the rate of reinforcement by lowering the criteriaat the beginning.  The rate did increase on its own but I generally try to get more clicks/minute in my first one or two training sessions when I'm shaping new behavior.

    Kota: same situation as Shadow (lowering criteria for higher reinforcement rate would be good), but even more so since Kota was more anxious/confused about the whole thing.  I would also have broken the session down into shorter increments with a non working break in between.  Even a few short breaks would likely have resulted in fewer long pauses and anxious/confused behavior on Kota's part.  I also noticed a few movements of the target stick that looked like you were trying to get him to pay attention.  I do this as well, but as someone earlier pointed out, it can really clutter things up in the long run. He really seemed to do well afetr you started throwing treats - any idea why that would be?  I'm wondering if just having to get up and get them allowed him to be more aware of other options or gave him little min breaks to think, who knows though.  I would've really ended the session around the time of that surge in performance around 6 minutes; after about 6:20 he really disengaged.

    Pepper: the best of the bunch imo - nice short session, high rate of reinforcement, little body language "clutter", etc.  She is rather focused on food isn't she! :)

     
     

    • Gold Top Dog

    All 3 of these dogs are seasoned free-shapers as well.

    stardog85

    Shadow: Very clean and efficient overall!  I would probably have tried to up the rate of reinforcement by lowering the criteriaat the beginning.  The rate did increase on its own but I generally try to get more clicks/minute in my first one or two training sessions when I'm shaping new behavior.

    To lower criteria do you mean to c/t any looking at or movement towards the stick?  I was wondering about this, should we do that if the movement is not related to the stick at all?  I mean, she does a lot of dancing around but she hardly looked at the stick in the beginning.  I didn't want to c/t random movements.  Part of Shadow's free-shaping behavior involves a lot of random movement hoping something gets clicked.  So with her, I am a bit more selective on what gets clicked and what doesn't. 

    stardog85
    Kota: same situation as Shadow (lowering criteria for higher reinforcement rate would be good), but even more so since Kota was more anxious/confused about the whole thing.  I would also have broken the session down into shorter increments with a non working break in between.  Even a few short breaks would likely have resulted in fewer long pauses and anxious/confused behavior on Kota's part.  I also noticed a few movements of the target stick that looked like you were trying to get him to pay attention.  I do this as well, but as someone earlier pointed out, it can really clutter things up in the long run. He really seemed to do well afetr you started throwing treats - any idea why that would be?  I'm wondering if just having to get up and get them allowed him to be more aware of other options or gave him little min breaks to think, who knows though.  I would've really ended the session around the time of that surge in performance around 6 minutes; after about 6:20 he really disengaged.

    Wow 8 minutes?  I didn't pay attention when I pulled it off the camera.  Um, a little too long eh?  lol...  Also the clicker was rather loud and he didn't care for it.  I've had to go to a more used clicker for softer noise, so that's part of the anxiousiness.  And yeah, I kind of dragged it along too much.  And  he kept biting it.  Silly dog thought he should grab the stick, not just touch it with his nose.  I should have quit after about 1:20 when he really started biting it and not drag it out for 8 freakin' minutes!  sheesh...  Can you tell he's my favorite?  Wink

    stardog85
    Pepper: the best of the bunch imo - nice short session, high rate of reinforcement, little body language "clutter", etc.  She is rather focused on food isn't she! :)

     

    Ya think?  ;)  She is a food hound.  Great drive and energy when she thinks food is involved.  Now if I could only figure out how to get that energy to last through an agility course...  

    • Gold Top Dog

     The only thing I have to say is that you know someone is a serious dognerd if they have weave poles in the living room. Big Smile

    • Gold Top Dog

    spiritdogs

     The only thing I have to say is that you know someone is a serious dognerd if they have weave poles in the living room. Big Smile

     

    Big Smile   rotfl.....

    Yup!  Well I gotta practice somehow!  It's too dark outside when I get home in the winter to play outside...  so I have a jump, 6 pole weaves and a teacup sized tunnel in the house that we play with.  Big Smile