Let me
preface this by saying that I do not like the term "purely positive",
and I generally avoid any use of it. In fact, I find it to be
moderately aversive, in spite of the fact that my own training approach
could technically be termed as such. However, because it is a term that
is used commonly, both by those who choose to incorporate correction
into their training, and by the general pet public, I believe that
consideration of the term is in order.
In behavior
theory speak, the term "purely positive" is used to designate dog
trainers who train, almost exclusively, using positive reinforcers
(incorporating limited use of negative punishment where needed), and who
deliberately avoid all use of positive punishment and negative
reinforcement. In common speak, "purely positive" means that the
trainer uses things that the dog likes as rewards to help the dog learn,
and avoids things that the dog finds unpleasant, aversive, or painful.
But in actual practice, I find that "purely positive" tends to be used much more as a statement of what the trainer is not doing - correcting the dog - than a clear description of what the trainer actually is
doing, which can be quite systematic and effective. This tends to give
the incorrect impression that the "purely positive" trainer is actually
not doing much of anything!
One of the
main reasons why I find the term aversive is because I have heard it
thrown in the face of primarily positive reinforcement based trainers
(hereafter designated as +R) as an attempt to discredit their training
methods, based not on actual results that the trainer may or may not
have achieved using +R methods, but on the often repeated mantra: no training can be purely positive all the time.
Technically,
that is true. No training can be "purely positive" all the time.
Sometimes an approach that the trainer intends to be reinforcing to the
dog turns out to be aversive to a particular dog. And there are times
when an individual trainer may not pick up on that. Accidents that are
aversive to the dog happen - things fall over, paws get stepped on,
trainer timing is sometimes off and feedback to the dog can be unclear,
etc. And, there are times when restricting the dog's access to
something that he or she might want is necessary. In other words, even
when the trainer is committed to a +R approach, everything is not
pleasant for the dog at all times.
+R trainers
are well aware of all of this. The aim of +R training is not to make
everything pleasant for the dog at all times, but to facilitate canine
learning, primarily, though methods that employ the use of positive
reinforcement. This is an important distinction. I would say that the
vast majority of trainers, regardless of training method chosen,
ultimately want to make life as pleasant as possible for their
dogs. And it is a fact that there are times in the learning process,
and in life itself, when the dog will experience times of difficulty and
frustration, and when he will not always have what he wants. And while +R trainers do make a deliberate choice to avoid use of training
techniques that use aversion to teach concepts and behavior, they also
know that training is a discipline that often presents challenges to the
dog along the way. In other words, of course, no training is "purely
positive" all the time, in the sense that no training is 100% pleasant
to the dog at all times.
This,
however, does not change the fact that there are many, many good +R
trainers out there who get excellent results. I propose that the
effectiveness of +R training methods should be judged on the basis of
the actual results that competent +R trainers produce, and not on
implications associated with a term that does not precisely describe
this type of training to begin with.
Another
reason why I avoid the use of the term "purely positive" is that the
term is used to mischaracterize +R trainers as "cookie pushers" who
lack any clear purpose, structure, or use of intellect in their
training. I often hear things like, "a dog won't stop for a cookie when
he is busy chasing a squirrel". As if +R trainers are outside,
pointlessly calling "cookie, cookie, cookie" while waving a hot dog in
the air, as the dog is tearing away full speed and then call that a
training method! There are certainly those who have that impression
when they hear the term "purely positive"!
+R training
is highly structured, the methods that fall under the umbrella of +R
have clear purpose, and +R trainers know how to develop training plans
that take the individual needs of the dog into account. A good +R
trainer would no more recommend the above approach than he or she would
recommend that a skydiving instructor should wait until the skydiving
student is falling from the plane before explaining how the parachute
works!
Finally,
"purely positive" is often understood to mean, simply, "never say no".
For many the term is synonymous with "let the dog do whatever he wants
and when you like something he does, give him a cookie, and ignore
absolutely everything else". So, if the dog is running toward a busy
street, ignore it; if the dog is about to eat a fully cooked chicken
that is sitting on the counter, ignore it; if the dog poops all over the
house, ignore it; if the dog is bullying other dogs in the house,
ignore it. This is absolutely not what happens when one trains using +R!
In reality,
the +R trainer would view these scenarios more like this: if the dog is
running toward a busy street, use a well trained recall to call the dog
back; if the dog is about to eat a fully cooked chicken that is sitting
on the counter, use a well trained leave it cue to indicate that it
should be left alone; if the dog poops all over the house, go back to
training 101 and teach the dog to go to the bathroom outdoors (unless
it's a medical issue, of course, in which case, consult a vet); if the
dog is bullying other dogs in the house, assess and address the
situation to ensure the well being of all of the dogs. And while the +R trainer will choose to use positive reinforcers to teach the
excellent recall, the well-understood "leave it", and a combination of
positive reinforcement/negative punishment to teach the dog where to
defecate and how to behave appropriately around the other dogs, the
idea of that the "purely positive" trainer is sitting around letting it
all happen is simply false.
I believe
that this misconception has developed from an incorrect understanding of
the free shaping training technique. Yes, when one is free shaping,
the trainer allows the dog to do anything he or she chooses and then
clicks and gives a treat when the dog does something that the trainer
wants. Through this process, the dog learns what is being clicked
frequently and begins to offer that behavior, and then that offering is
"shaped" into a concrete behavior that is put on a cue. This can be
done to teach basic behaviors, tricks, and sport skills.
It is
important to note that free shaping is done within the context of
training sessions, not throughout life in general. Free shaping should
be done in situations where the dog is going to be safe no matter what
he or she should choose to do, like a living room or other training
space. Free shaping is not done with the untrained dog off leash next
to a busy street. And, of course, if the dog is going to do something
that is unsafe during a free shaping session, the dog is not left to do
that unsafe thing in the name of shaping!
In reality,
dogs who are trained through +R methods learn to ignore cars that they
would have formerly chased, they learn to recall off of squirrels and
other exciting things, they learn to greet people and other dogs
politely, they are housetrained, they learn what is theirs to chew and
what is not a chew toy, they learn to walk politely on loose leashes,
etc. etc. etc.
+R training
is all about the dog learning how to be a good citizen in the human
world, how to be a polite member of a human household, how to carry out a
set of tasks to assist us with our work, or, sometimes, how to be a
skilled and competent participant in a human-made dog sport.
"Purely positive" expresses none of this, and implies a good deal that is actually not true.
I am all for
abandoning the term entirely in favor of finding more precise ways of
describing what +R training is really about! The more people come to understand +R training as a diverse, effective, and highly substantial training discipline, the better.
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