ron2
Posted : 12/19/2007 6:38:47 PM
Allow me to cast the first semantic gauntlet. I think "hands-off" can also be a euphemism for an absence or diminished use of physical corrections, such as collar pops, pins, finger-bites, etc. That doesn't mean you can't touch your dogs or even give touch cues. I've heard some describe their "finger-bites' and it sounded more like a touch cue. I also propose that our rounded primate fingers do not feel like pointed fangs and incisor teeth as one would find on a dog. But some feel as if it works.
Anyway, what I value about the clicker is the steadiness of the noise. I happen to sing. I've been playing guitar since 1974 but I've only seriously worked on my voice since 1987. My voice can change from day to day. While running through my practice set, it can change a little from beginning to end. Point being, you can say yes 4 different times and you will say it 4 different ways that you can't hear but your dog can hear. Also, change in pitch within a word also means something to a dog.
The clicker never changes. So, when the dog hears that sound, it knows beyond all certainty that the sound equals a reward. The timing of a click is as pinpoint as the timing of a punishment should be. And it is easier to click at the exact instant a desired behavior occurs. Of course, there are some people for whom using the clicker doesn't work with their sense of timing, so they practiced and developed a verbal marker that, as best as they can, always sounds the same. Whatever floats your boat.
And you don't have to use the clicker forever, only for training newer behaviors. That's why it's not bad to link a marker word to the click so that when you fade the use of the clicker, you can transition to not needing it. After fading, the reward can become seemingly sporadic, like a slot machine in Vegas. As long as you let the dog "win" enough to keep playing. You get what you reinforce.
I prefer desensitization to flooding. The former is less traumatic than the latter, even though the aim of both is to change the meaning of the stimulus. So, it's okay if Shadow is still excited, as long as he's happy and excited, rather than nervous or reactive and excited.
I've heard it said that some dogs don't have a lot of time. Well, with my dog, I have him for life so I have approximately 10 years left, conservatively, to solve any problem. If I was fostering him, I wouldn't adopt him out until he was better, which means I would be taking the time to change his ways, which means there is time for desensitization. Rescuers and fosters are special people with a lot of knowledge but the family they adopt to doesn't always have the same level of knowledge. So, the dog is going to be managable before he/she moves on. I'm not discounting flooding but for me, that would be a tool in the back of the shed.
And sometimes, dogs desensitize over time with familiarity. Shadow used to be afraid of garbage trucks. Then, after about 3 months, he could care less. He used to freak out with the vacuum cleaner. Now, he justs moves out of the way. And he's never been afraid of the lawnmower and merely moves out of the way.