| QuickSilver | 04-27-2010 05:25 PM | Quote:
Originally Posted by WinstonMom
(Post 3104675)
I did not actually see Brenda Aloff, my agility instructor went to her seminar and then presented the seminar to a group of her students. I do believe that some barking is reactive barking, however, for example my guys (I have 6) will sometimes so wound up with their barking when someone comes to the door that they will actually start squabbling with each other. That is not rational thinking and they need to be snapped out of that. I love Brenda Aloff's books, the body language one is a great book. | That sounds like redirected aggression, which is very common, in people as well as dogs.
I think Aloff's model is very helpful. She describes the dog's brain as two modes, fore-brain and hind-brain. Barkfests are hind-brain, ie, purely reactive, and the dog is not receptive to your direction. She describes these modes as some kind of cart... I forget what. :) The kind of cart where the horses (brain modes) don't pull side by side, but one pulls in front of the other. So either your dog is in fore-brain mode (attentive, receptive, able to learn), or hind-brain mode (reactive). He can't be in both states at once.
I've found that Thor can flip back and forth in the blink of an eye. I'm training him with treats to stop barking at other dogs on the street. If I see the dog first, I put Thor in a Sit, give him a treat, and then show him another treat as we go by the other dog (Distract & Reward). This is extremely effective.
However, if I'm not fast enough, you can see his little mind struggling with the conundrum. "Bark for your life! But be quiet and watch the treat! But you must bark! But you must be quiet!" Then he'll Sit, bark, Sit, bark, Sit and generally act the fool. |