Cassidys Mom
Posted : 11/22/2007 1:09:59 PM
Cool! I've sort of been doing something similar with Keefer. He's become so barky around other dogs when he's on leash, primarily I believe because I rarely do leash walks with my dogs, and they are used to being able to interact freely with other dogs on our off leash walks every weekend. He's highly social, and loves to go up and greet other dogs. He's just over two years old, VERY energetic, highly distractible, easily aroused, with a low tolerance for frustration. He was throwing doggy tantrums because his desire to greet and play with every dog he sees was being thwarted. He's not fearful or aggressive, I've been doing NILIF with him since he was 9 weeks old and he's quite obedient around the house, he just needed more training under different, more distracting circumstances.
At first I started working with getting him to watch me until released on our walks, without any other dogs in sight. And then I'd use other dogs as bait, but from a distance he could handle without going off. Rather than tell him to watch me, or to specifically look at the other dog, I'd just talk to him with a happy face and voice, reward him for attention, and when he noticed the other dog I'd simply wait without saying anything. When he looked back at me, I'd reward him with a jackpot of treats and praise. I was able to find a couple of dogs behind chain link fences next to the sidewalk that I could use to work him gradually closer and closer to as he learned to control himself. At that point I'd tell him "look, there's a doggy over there!" in a happy tone of voice when we saw a dog across the street or in a yard and let him look as long as he wanted, then do the jackpot when he looked at me. On one walk we had 5 bait dogs to work with, and he didn't bark at a single one!
I think it's a good idea to let them look at what's interesting or stressing them rather than try to get perfect attention in the face of a distraction that big. I've never heard of it explained as a specific strategy, it just seems too hard to expect a dog to keep his eyes glued on you when there's that much going on, and I also like the idea of letting it be the dog's idea to look away and choose to focus on his owner rather than having to always command him to do so. When both Dena & Keefer were very young I'd sit down with them with a clicker and a bag of treats and reward them for spontaneous attention, really my first significant experience with using a clicker. I'd read about capturing behaviors so I thought I'd give it a try.