Liesje
Posted : 10/11/2010 10:14:45 AM
I think it's more about the dog's drive than the stress level. Even for my higher drive dog that does freeshaping VERY well, he is often stressed, but that is the point. I bring him into a state of imbalance/discomfort (either physically or mentally) and he has the drive to work and problem solve through that stress to figure out what I want and how to get at the reward. He actually shows MORE stress while freeshaping than my female who lacks the drive and confidence and just stands there or goes into avoidance because she can't figure out what I want. When I freeshaped Nikon's retrieve, I took videos of several sessions and was told by several people it was very helpful for them to read my explanation and see videos that I took *while* the dog was being trained (I didn't train the behavior chain, then go back and make a video for each step). In the first video, which is his truly his first session, he shows many stressful behaviors like whining/screaming, big yawns, looking away, ear position, etc. But he goes from nothing to firmly and calming taking the dowel in one session, ends with his tail wagging and a tug game. With this particular dog, he actually works *better* the more pressure and stress you create, but there again, he has more drive, he is very resilient, and he has the confidence to try things without being worried whether that behavior is "OK" or not.
The issue with my female is that she does not have the same drive level, she is less confident (so more likely to be worried about trying the wrong thing and more likely to just sit there), and she is less resilient/she cannot instantly recover if she feels she's made a mistake.
For my training it's not just the level of stress itself that I'm evaluating but how each dog reacts to it. Again, with a dog like Nikon I intentionally create more stress. With a dog like Kenya there needs to be less because she lacks the drive to push through and recover from the stress.