I like the Cheetah running up to the fence with the ball.. that was so cute! 😄🐅 I love positive reinforcement training with animals, it creates a bond with them.
Thorndike's Law of Effect: Actions which lead to a positive outcome are more likely to be repeated while actions which lead to a negative outcome are less likely to be repeated.
lovely video. Do you have to wash off the smell of a predator you've handled before working with prey animals? Like the cheetahs and antelope shown here.
I love this! Any of those bs 'alpha/dominance' dog trainers especially need to see this. If people can train wild animals without use of force or punishment, there is no reason it shouldn't work with domestic dogs.
'alpha' theory is only accurate to wolves that dont know each other too. in a group the dynamic is very different. chicken flocks are more accurate to 'alpha' nonsense lol
I like the Cheetah running up to the fence with the ball.. that was so cute! 😄🐅 I love positive reinforcement training with animals, it creates a bond with them.
The type of training works on children too.
Nice video Oregon zoo seeing your keepers and the animals during training sessions shows how good your bond is 👍🙂🐘
Excellent work and beautiful idea about leaving legacy of kindness to animals. So important!
Thanks for sharing 🌻
Thanks for sharing
Thank you for the upload...you guys are awesome!!! ❤❤❤❤
This was quite informative. Thanks for sharing this. :)
Yay! I've been hoping for a video about this for a while!
I love this video, it is the best.
Edit: 2:31 did you really train a tiger or cheetah?
Yep apparently so
Very informative video! 👍
Thorndike's Law of Effect: Actions which lead to a positive outcome are more likely to be repeated while actions which lead to a negative outcome are less likely to be repeated.
lovely video. Do you have to wash off the smell of a predator you've handled before working with prey animals? Like the cheetahs and antelope shown here.
headcoatee Good question 🤔
I love this! Any of those bs 'alpha/dominance' dog trainers especially need to see this.
If people can train wild animals without use of force or punishment, there is no reason it shouldn't work with domestic dogs.
'alpha' theory is only accurate to wolves that dont know each other too. in a group the dynamic is very different. chicken flocks are more accurate to 'alpha' nonsense lol
I love this