In the study of human psychology, there was a psychologist called Skinner, who was also considered a behaviorist as well. He studied the practice called Operant Conditioning, which basically is the study of behavior and its consequences. The subject chooses the behavior for some type of positive reward or possibly a negative reward. But nonetheless, the subject gets some kind of reward or consequence when performing a certain specific behavior. The actual definition is “Operant conditioning can be described as a process that attempts to modify behavior through the use of positive and negative reinforcement. Through operant conditioning, an individual makes an association between a particular behavior and a consequence.”
Skinner performed experiments with monkeys and mice to prove his theories of behavior. Basically, when training a dog, when the desired behavior is performed, the animal is positively rewarded with food. It is proved to be the most effective way to train a dog. In the animal world, other forms of training are outdated and some are considered abusive. “Red zoned” dogs, which are aggressive dogs, the media portrays outdated ways to train them. Red zones dogs actually need positive reinforcement training the most. It also has been proven that aggressive dogs benefit more than calm dogs when it comes to positive reward based training.
A canine is basically the same mental age as a human toddler, and an abusive approach is never the correct approach. The trainer is a human being, and a human has the brain capacity to shape and modify their behavior, depending on which situation they’re currently in. A canine does not have the luxury of having a super smart brain, and can not modify its behavior as easily. They are still animals, domesticated or not, no matter how human they may seem, whether they’re your best friend or exercise buddy, they still only have animal brains.
In the media there are plenty of wrong and terrible portrayals of dog trainers. They show outdated techniques and make the general dog owning public feel guilty for NOT using their techniques. These trainers bully the dogs, and seem to try and bully or shame the public as well. Being able to dominate a dog, does not make the dog obedient, it stresses the dog. Under stress and aggression, there is fear in the dog. Dogs have a natural drive within them, that drive makes them want food at all times. Humans can use that eternal drive within the dog and use positive reinforcement with food to actually have better outcomes, much better than domineering techniques. The behavior of canines should be shaped by positive reward behavior used by dog trainers, and all other techniques should be avoided.