I was listening to a radio interview from my friend, Muriel
Brasseur from the Oxfordshire Animal Behaviour Centre, the other day which was about the subject of how dogs communicate
with humans.
The interview was about a newspaper article which focused on some research into how dogs pick up on our ‘intent
to communicate’ with them, not just through our voices but also the visual cues
we give too. Many of us working with and
living with dogs already know how adept dogs are at reading our body language
and that our hounds take in the whole package of verbal and non-verbal
communication signals we give them.
One of the things that Muriel said in the interview was about
training herself out of chatting with her dog when undertaking obedience
training and helping dogs avoid just hearing a wall of sound. This really got me thinking about how I
communicate with my own dogs.
I'm the one in the crown (being very quiet)! |
I’ve always been a chatty and talkative person for as long
as I can remember. Even from the age of 7,
I remember a teacher betting me the princely sum of 2 pence (well, it was 1970s)
that I couldn’t remain quiet whilst presiding over the Mayday dances in my
capacity as Rose Queen (an old English tradition at the school I went to. A
girl was voted for by the school to be dressed up in a white frock, wear a
crown, sit on a throne and watch all the Mayday dances). On that occasion I think the lure of 2 pence
and all the sweets it could buy me proved to be a suitable motivator and I
managed to stay quiet and collect my ‘stake’ at the end. (An early example of
lure and reward training at work!)
Anyway, you get the picture: I like to talk. I’ve moderated how and what I say as I’ve
grown older, particularly in a work situation, however I do find myself
chatting to the dogs and cats on a fairly regular basis. When I lived by myself I chatted to them
rather than doing a ‘Shirley Valentine’ – chatting to the wall.
In my training classes I stress the importance of only
giving the voice signal once and not repeatedly saying, for example, sit, sit,
sit, sit, SIT (normally getting progressively louder, as the dog doesn’t
comply). And explain that repeatedly
saying a signal without the desired behaviour from the dog can lead to learned
irrelevance. Overusing the word/cue without
the dog displaying the wanted behaviour means the word loses its relevance and
‘sit’ doesn’t really mean sit anymore.
What the interview got me thinking was: does this and can
this apply to praise? I like to praise people and dogs when they do
something right and because I can be quite effusive when I talk, I wonder if I
sometimes go over the top. Does this
mean, like repeatedly saying a voice signal that the praise starts to lose its
meaning and the dog tunes out? Should I
be using praise like I would use a high value food reward?
'Ear 'Ear says Mina |
I’ve looked back at some of the YouTube footage of me and
Mina in some training sessions – in some I praise effusively and a lot, in
others I still praise but not as much.
It’s certainly got me thinking though. Silence can be golden – I’ve
noticed that if I’m calmer both in tone of voice and what I say, Mina is calmer
too and it doesn’t affect her responsiveness to me, but then again when I’m
excitable and praising, Mina reacts in a similar manner.
There are so many stimuli for our dogs to pick up on – all
the interesting smells to investigate, all the interesting things to see and
all the things (to potentially) taste and sometimes I wonder if adding our voices on top of all the other
sounds may just add another layer to filter out?
I’m sure this differs dog to dog and owner to owner but I’d
be really interested on what you think, so please do share your thoughts.
Susan & hounds.