For definition purposes:
http://www.mcli.dist.maricopa.edu/proj/nru/nr.html
I'm trying to sort this out for my dog Woobie. He is not food motivated or toy motivated. Training him has been a real challenge. Inside the house, the clicker and treats work great. But outside the house, due to his skittish nature, he's so very hyperaware that he shuts down to treats and to paying attention to me most of the time. If I make him SUPER HUNGRY (as in not feeding him ALL DAY) he will take treats or chase a toy in a training environment maybe 40-50% of the time and after the first maybe 10-15 minutes of taking treats, it seems to satisfy his hunger enough that he shuts down again, doesn't listen to commands, doesn't take treats and just is way too aware of his surroundings to focus. The one thing I found has some success is verbal/physical praise and reward. If I sort of talk him through things and keep my voice and demeanor upbeat and happy, he seems to respond to that, but it's never been a consistent thing, it's hit or miss like most of the other things I've tried.
We did 6 months of training with a trainer that used prong collars on all the dogs. I, however, was committed to using the clicker and NOT the prong, and they supported that. As other dogs moved on, we stayed in Level 1 forever. Finally, I think the trainer took pity on us and moved us to Level 2. After 4 months, I decided to use the prong. It's one with the rubber caps on all the prongs and with his thick fur, there's not a painful correction as much as an attention getting one, IMHO. The trainer did teach to do sharp tugs on the collar with the prong on. I know now that's not the way they're supposed to be used. In the last 2 months of training, Woobie became much more focused and moved through Level 4 very quickly. He wouldn't pull, wouldn't be as distracted, obeyed commands much more quickly, and even tolerated children at much closer distances than before. I honestly only had to administer a tug maybe 5 times total and can now walk him with the prong collar on but no lead attached. Just its presence on his neck puts him in a different state of mind and he performs much better.
But I'm conflicted about it. I want him to heel and sit and be closer to children without freaking out because he wants to, not because he's avoiding a negative correction. But, in talking with the SPCA trainer and my son who is a psychology major, there seems to be some dogs (or rats - lol) who just respond better to negative reinforcement than positive. I'm committed to giving the clicker 6 more months of hard core training and not using the prong even when I'm frustrated or wanting to just move along more quickly. But at the end of the year, I'm going to make a decision once and for all and just go with it and not worry about being politically correct or my dog's friend/buddy/partner/whatever and go with what works for him.
FWIW, growing up we got a 1 y.o. lab who had been obedience trained with the old traditional choke collar. She was on 100% voice command and we had nothing to do with training her other than the person we got her from saying if she doesn't do what you command her to on the first request you give her a correction with the collar. We never had to do that, the chain collar just hung on her neck and she did what she was told. Even w/o the collar, off lead, she was perfect. I don't know if it was her disposition or her training, but since that dog I have wanted a dog that was at least 50% as obedient as she was. I just haven't been able to figure out how to make that happen with my dogs so far. One was a tenacious airedale terrier who was stubborn as the day was long, Woobie is from possibly feral parents, very skittish and hyperaware outside his home environment, and my dear Indie is the one dog I believe has the potential to be that "dream" obedient dog I've wanted. He's super food motivated, loves to work with me, comes when called, stays by my side and I don't envision any situation where I'd need a prong collar on him.
Thoughts? Is it a temperament thing between dogs or breeds? Has anyone had experiences where correction-based training worked better for a particular dog than reward-based training? Just looking for thoughts/experiences.
Yes We Can! Yes We Can!

30 lbs. by Christmas, down 5.8 lbs., 24.2 to go!!!
