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Showing Your
Dog...
SHAPING FOR THE SHOW RING - Part I
Karen Pryor
How to 'shape' your show dog into a winner by using a 'conditioned
reinforcer', without using physical corrections.
"Shaping" is a new technique for turning show dogs into winners. My
friend Barbara loves Great Danes and enjoys showing her dogs but her
new Great Dane, Heather, was frustrating her. Barbara showed Heather
in her first puppy class at 8 months. When the judge leaned over to
touch the dog, Heather ran behind Barbara and wouldn't let the man
near her. Heather disqualified herself because of her seemingly poor
temperament. She was terrified of strangers. It looked as if
Heather's show career was over before it had begun.
Barbara approached me with this problem. I'm a behavioral biologist,
and an author of books and articles on how to shape behavior with
positive reinforcements. Shaping is scientific slang for building a
particular behavior by using a series of small steps to achieve it.
Shaping allows you to create behavior from scratch without physical
control or corrections, but rather by drawing on your animal's
natural ability to learn. Lately many dog trainers have begun
applying this technique - called operant conditioning - to canine
tasks and sports.
To shape behavior rapidly and effectively you must use a distinct
signal, such as a touch or a noise, that marks the instant the right
action occurs. After the signal the animal is given something it
likes, such as praise, petting, toys or food.
Although praise and food conveys to the animal that you're pleased,
the marker signal is actually more important because it tells the
animal exactly what it was doing that earned it the treat. That
information makes it both possible and likely the animal will do the
right thing again. Dolphin trainers use a whistle as their marker
signal, or 'conditional reinforcer'. Dog trainers seem to have
settled on a toy clicker.
How could this help Barbara? Barbara, Heather and I arranged to meet
at a dog show, where Barbara had brought Heather just to get her
used to the many new sights and sounds. Heather was certainly
pretty, and the sights and sounds didn't seem to bother her. She
gazed around with the aplomb typical of Danes - until I reached out
to pet her. Then she shied like a horse and backed away to the end
of her lead.
I had no interest in why Heather behaved this way; my aim was to see
if we could get Heather to react in a more appropriate manner.
We found a quite spot, beyond the crowds. I bought some sausage at
the hot dog stand on the show grounds (it's always wise to start
this process with something truly delicious). Heather ate the
sausage slices, but only if Barbara fed them to her (she wouldn't
take them from me). I gave Barbara a plastic clicker and showed her
how to begin the shaping procedure. Click, then treat. Click, then
treat. Teach the dog to expect the treat when it hears the click.
Then I had Barbara walk the dog around for a few minutes, clicking
whenever Heather appeared to relax.
Barbara took the clicker home. The next day she took Heather to a
nearby shopping center. Whenever someone came down the sidewalk
towards them, Barbara clicked, then stopped Heather and gave her a
treat. Soon Heather was walking calmly toward approaching strangers.
Often, of course, peopled wanted to pet Heather. On the third day
Barbara began letting people touch Heather on the back. Barbara
clicked if Heather stood still. Heather quickly learned to stand
still on purpose. From her viewpoint, she had Barbara all figured
out: if Heather accepted petting, Barbara clicked and gave a treat
every time.
The next weekend Barbara took Heather to the second show of her
life. Heather trotted calmly beside Barbara and stood politely while
the judge looked at her teeth and felt her legs. Heather won her
class. Three weeks later, Heather won a puppy class and beat several
adult female Great Danes, earning her first championship points.
A Pleasant Process
It seemed like a miracle. It wasn't. The clicker 'explained' to
Heather that she would be 'paid' for letting herself be touched by
strangers. She discovered for herself that the process was harmless,
even pleasant. The last time I saw Heather (again, at a show) she
had dived into a crowd of teenagers and was reveling in being
scratched and petted by six at once.
Becky's Standard Schnauzer, Dash, had a different problem: She
wouldn't keep her ears and tail up. Like Heather, Dash was a very
nice-looking bitch, and Becky felt she had great potential; but a
Schnauzer with its ears flat and its tail tucked is not a impressive
sign. Dash had long since lost interest in squeaky toys; you
couldn’t fool her into pricking her hears.
Becky got a clicker and taught Dash that click means treat. She then
spent five minutes every evening playing with Dash. Every time
Dash's ears went up, Becky clicked. A truck went by, the Schnauzer
pricked her ears - click, treat.
Dash started pricking her ears on purpose. Soon Becky could wait to
click until Dash kept her ears up for two seconds - then three, then
five, then wile posed and while moving. Before long, when Dash saw
the clicker, her ears when up and stayed there.
Becky shaped Dash's tail carriage in exactly the same way. At first,
she gave Dash a click for any tail movement, then for a tail
horizontal to the ground, then for a tail a little higher. Dash
wagged her tail at first; later, she started trying to lift it on
purpose. They worked in five- or 10-minute sessions, first at home,
then in parks, then in busy places among other dogs and people.
Becky also taught Dash to self-stack. First she clicked for the back
feet, until Dash always stopped with her feet in the right place.
Then Becky 'added' the front feet, later the head position. Dash
preferred stacking herself to being pushed and pulled about. Dash
learned to hold her pose like a model - even while a judge felt her
coat and opened her mouth. She quickly learned she could rely on
Becky to 'pay' her for the job. Now, six months after the first
click, Dash shines with pride and confidence. Dash and Becky have
won Best of Breed or Best of Opposite Sex at all four shows they've
been in.
Trying It Yourself
Although operant conditioning is different from conventional
training, it is not particularly difficult. In fact, pet owners with
no traditional dog training experience are often better at it than
seasoned professionals. Try it for yourself. You don't need a
clicker: Rattle the change in your pocket, clink a spoon on a glass
or cluck with your tongue to mark the instant you see a behavior in
your dog that you want to strengthen. (It's best to save your voice
for praise and affection; to dogs, a brief, unusual sound is a much
clearer behavior marker than a spoken word.) Try to shape a simple
task such as spin, roll over or shut the door. Don't worry about how
the dog 'feels'; concentrate on what behavior you want to elicit
from the dog. And remember to have fun! Shaping is a great game.
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