To answer the original question, I think email is sort of off the mark. Dogs bark for these primary reasons:
- Alert barking: to notify the pack of an intruder, and also tell the intruder he has been spotted.
- Attention seeking barking: if you make the mistake of paying attention to your dog when he barks, of course he will bark more to get more attention!
- Frustration / Excitement: A dog may go nuts barking at the dog park because he is so revved up, and wants to get off his leash.
- "Spooky" barking - this is really the only "out of control" barking, where the dog is saying, "Don't come any closer, I'm dangerous!" This is often fear-motivated, and that's why it can be so hard to control.
You can have a dog that's superbly trained in Agility, but barks his head off whenever he sees a cat. Or you could have a dog that doesn't bark, but steals food off the table. I'd consider anti-bark training to be about impulse control, which would also cover "Stay".
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