I discovered this wonderful woman too late! I'm so grateful so much of her invaluable work is online to help me and countless others with our animals. Rest in Peace, Dr. Yin. xo
I am so excited to start training my dog using more positive methods! He is a sensitive boy and doesn't respond well to dominance or fear based training. I learned a lot about successive approximation while doing my psych degree and trained rats with this method but never thought to transfer it to my dog!
I'm finding Dr. Yin's methods really helpful! Not really sold on the treat dispenser though .. I like my dog to look to me for his food and rewards as I think it helps build our relationship. I hand feed a lot and often use organic chicken dog kibble for training rewards. I feed fresh food twice a day (meat, veggies, oatmeal, eggs ...) from a bowl. He chows down in less than a minute so I hold the bowl for him to avoid food aggression and I reinforce one of his commands (SIT or DOWN or COME) before I feed him.
Hi John! These teachings have been blended into several of her courses. Is there a particular aspect of this that you're looking for so we can direct you to an appropriate course?
@@CattleDogPublishing It looks like it was excerpted from a longer video so I was looking for the whole thing - hoping to keep the teachings alive. Hope you are all doing well!
I discovered this wonderful woman too late! I'm so grateful so much of her invaluable work is online to help me and countless others with our animals. Rest in Peace, Dr. Yin. xo
She was one of the great pioneers of modern learning theory. Fantastic woman.
I am so excited to start training my dog using more positive methods! He is a sensitive boy and doesn't respond well to dominance or fear based training. I learned a lot about successive approximation while doing my psych degree and trained rats with this method but never thought to transfer it to my dog!
RIP Dr Yin, you will be greatly missed. The veterinary community is mourning your loss. :-(
Still miss you so much Dr. Yin.
A great loss to those of us who have so much appreciated her help training our dogs
agandl1 she was too good for this world probably.
excellent video
I'm finding Dr. Yin's methods really helpful! Not really sold on the treat dispenser though .. I like my dog to look to me for his food and rewards as I think it helps build our relationship. I hand feed a lot and often use organic chicken dog kibble for training rewards. I feed fresh food twice a day (meat, veggies, oatmeal, eggs ...) from a bowl. He chows down in less than a minute so I hold the bowl for him to avoid food aggression and I reinforce one of his commands (SIT or DOWN or COME) before I feed him.
What DVD set is this a part of? Is it still available?
Hi John! These teachings have been blended into several of her courses. Is there a particular aspect of this that you're looking for so we can direct you to an appropriate course?
@@CattleDogPublishing It looks like it was excerpted from a longer video so I was looking for the whole thing - hoping to keep the teachings alive. Hope you are all doing well!
What do you call the automatic feeder?
That is the Treat and Train
That chicken, though! 😝
So, what happens when you're out of food, you've got nothing to bribe your dog to do something you need, like a re-call or a leave-it?
The goal is to work to where you don't need treats.
I find with fattening my dog up. He is skinny since I found him on the street
Thank you. this will help a lot :)