I have been looking all over for a good example of shaping and they're harder to find than you would think. I finally found THIS one. I appreciate it very much. Great example!
My dogs are used to working for their food. So, as long as my timing is good and I get the treat to them quickly after I've said "yes" and used a reward marker, they will work for quite a long time even though it's really a brain strain for them. It's also just important to know how long it's ok to let them try "wrong" thing, how long to stay on the same step, and when to add in extra steps. Good luck!
am i the only one who has just had a breakthrough.. haha, im in psych studying for a final tomorrow and i never fully understood this concept until now.. thank you so much
the word "yes" in this example is not the behavior command or cue, its an operant conditioner just like a clicker (many trainers use a sound like clicking the tongue or word like 'yes' instead of a clicker as it frees up a hand). when clicker training you don't introduce the actual cue until the animal is offering the complete behavior . in this case you would introduce the command "box" after the dog is consistently offering the final goal behavior (placing both front legs in the box).
"yes" isn't the cue for the behavior, it's a reward marker, marking the behavior she did right, letting her know she'd won a treat. "Yes" is like the "click" in clicker training, and is always the reward marker no matter the behavior being taught. In contrast, "box" would apply to only this behavior. You could add the cue "box" later, after the behavior is reliable. Does that explanation help?
Very beautiful and smart Australian Cattle Dog, of course she has a fantastic owner too. I have two blue girls at home, they are smart and athletic like yours is.
Dr,Yin.thank you for you kindly reply! i used your method to free shape my puppy to step on a book last nite, he worked on that very well.^^ i have an other questions about the "aggressive dog" , ithk i should post it to your "aggresive dog to people" vid. Cheers Daisy
I have a question about free shaping. I have a 20 mon the old GSD that I've always used luring w/. We've never had a problem using the luring, but one day I decided to try free shaping just for the fun of it. He was lost. I got him to try a little bit but after about two min. he just sat there and staired at me trying to get me to tell him what to do. How do I start working on free shaping w/ him?
I have been looking all over for a good example of shaping and they're harder to find than you would think. I finally found THIS one. I appreciate it very much. Great example!
My dogs are used to working for their food. So, as long as my timing is good and I get the treat to them quickly after I've said "yes" and used a reward marker, they will work for quite a long time even though it's really a brain strain for them. It's also just important to know how long it's ok to let them try "wrong" thing, how long to stay on the same step, and when to add in extra steps. Good luck!
am i the only one who has just had a breakthrough.. haha, im in psych studying for a final tomorrow and i never fully understood this concept until now.. thank you so much
I hope you did well on your final!!!
Its so much fun to see a dog teaking. And i love australian cattle dog.
the word "yes" in this example is not the behavior command or cue, its an operant conditioner just like a clicker (many trainers use a sound like clicking the tongue or word like 'yes' instead of a clicker as it frees up a hand). when clicker training you don't introduce the actual cue until the animal is offering the complete behavior . in this case you would introduce the command "box" after the dog is consistently offering the final goal behavior (placing both front legs in the box).
wow, this is great. definitely going to try it with my dog
Thankyou Dr. Yin and good dog for this amazing video learning !
"yes" isn't the cue for the behavior, it's a reward marker, marking the behavior she did right, letting her know she'd won a treat. "Yes" is like the "click" in clicker training, and is always the reward marker no matter the behavior being taught. In contrast, "box" would apply to only this behavior. You could add the cue "box" later, after the behavior is reliable. Does that explanation help?
Very beautiful and smart Australian Cattle Dog, of course she has a fantastic owner too. I have two blue girls at home, they are smart and athletic like yours is.
Clever Doggo!
Clever woman! I am a huge fan
Thanks for answering that you guys!
yes it is operant conditoning. more specifically.. it's shaping successive approximations
i tryed this with my four year old sheltie johnnie :)) he put all four paws into it with in five mins YEAHHHH. :))) love your video's
That's great! Good luck!
Dr,Yin.thank you for you kindly reply!
i used your method to free shape my puppy to step on a book last nite, he worked on that very well.^^
i have an other questions about the "aggressive dog" , ithk i should post it to your "aggresive dog to people" vid.
Cheers
Daisy
free shaping!im gonna try!thx for that..but how could you make him focus on this game so long?
I have a question about free shaping. I have a 20 mon the old GSD that I've always used luring w/. We've never had a problem using the luring, but one day I decided to try free shaping just for the fun of it. He was lost. I got him to try a little bit but after about two min. he just sat there and staired at me trying to get me to tell him what to do. How do I start working on free shaping w/ him?
Library, CHECK
Piano, CHECK
ACD, CHECK
Wow
Now we just need treats for human kids and make them obey us.