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Don't Shoot the Dog

Don't Shoot the Dog

The New Art of Teaching and Training
by Karen Pryor 1999 224 pages
4.25
6k+ ratings
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Key Takeaways

1. Positive reinforcement is the most effective method for behavior change

A reinforcer is anything that, occurring in conjunction with an act, tends to increase the probability that the act will occur again.

Positive reinforcement works. Unlike punishment or negative reinforcement, positive reinforcement increases the likelihood of a behavior recurring without any negative side effects. It can be used to shape complex behaviors in animals and humans alike. Positive reinforcers can be anything the subject finds rewarding - food, praise, attention, or privileges.

The key is to deliver the reinforcer immediately after the desired behavior occurs. This creates a clear association between the behavior and the reward. Variable schedules of reinforcement, where rewards are given intermittently rather than every time, are particularly effective at maintaining behaviors long-term.

Some examples of using positive reinforcement:

  • Praising a child for cleaning their room
  • Giving a dog a treat for sitting on command
  • Offering an employee a bonus for meeting performance goals
  • Smiling at someone when they greet you warmly

2. Shaping allows for developing complex behaviors through small steps

Shaping consists of taking a very small tendency in the right direction and shifting it, one small step at a time, toward an ultimate goal.

Shaping builds behaviors gradually. Complex behaviors that would never occur spontaneously can be developed by reinforcing small approximations of the desired end behavior. This allows trainers to create elaborate tricks or skills that would be impossible to teach all at once.

The key steps in shaping are:

  1. Identify the target behavior
  2. Reinforce any small movement in that direction
  3. Gradually raise criteria for reinforcement
  4. Continue reinforcing closer and closer approximations
  5. Only reinforce the complete desired behavior

Examples of shaping in action:

  • Teaching a dolphin to do a backflip by first reinforcing any upward motion
  • Developing a child's writing skills by praising scribbles, then letter-like shapes, then actual letters
  • Training a dog to retrieve by rewarding looking at an object, then moving toward it, then touching it, then picking it up

3. Timing is crucial in reinforcement and behavior modification

Laggardly reinforcement is the beginning trainer's biggest problem.

Timing is everything. The reinforcer must occur immediately after the desired behavior for the association to be made. Even a delay of a few seconds can result in reinforcing the wrong behavior. This is why tools like clickers are so effective - they allow for precise marking of the exact moment the correct behavior occurs.

Poor timing can lead to:

  • Reinforcing behaviors you don't want
  • Confusion for the learner about what exactly is being reinforced
  • Slower learning and less reliable performance of desired behaviors

Tips for improving reinforcement timing:

  • Use a marker signal like a clicker or specific word
  • Practice your timing with games or exercises
  • Be prepared with reinforcers readily available
  • Focus intently on the subject to catch desired behaviors instantly

4. Extinction can effectively eliminate unwanted behaviors

Behavior that produces no results—not good results or bad results, just no results—will probably extinguish.

Ignoring can eliminate behaviors. When a behavior that previously produced some kind of result (even negative attention) suddenly produces no result at all, it will likely decrease in frequency and eventually stop altogether. This process is called extinction.

Extinction can be an effective and gentle way to eliminate problem behaviors, especially attention-seeking ones. However, it requires consistency - even occasional reinforcement can maintain the undesired behavior.

Key points about extinction:

  • Works best for behaviors maintained by attention
  • Requires patience - behaviors often increase before decreasing
  • Must be consistent - any reinforcement can undo progress
  • Can be combined with reinforcing alternative behaviors

Examples of using extinction:

  • Ignoring a child's whining to reduce the behavior
  • Not reacting to a dog's barking for attention
  • Ceasing to argue with a spouse's complaints

5. Punishment is often ineffective and can have negative side effects

Punishment is a clumsy way of modifying behavior. In fact, much of the time punishment doesn't work at all.

Punishment has drawbacks. While punishment can sometimes suppress behavior in the short-term, it often fails to produce lasting change and can have numerous negative side effects. These can include fear, aggression, avoidance of the punisher, and suppression of other desirable behaviors.

Problems with punishment:

  • Often occurs too late to affect behavior
  • Doesn't teach alternative behaviors
  • Can damage relationships
  • May reinforce punisher through negative attention
  • Effectiveness decreases over time

More effective alternatives to punishment:

  • Positive reinforcement of desired behaviors
  • Extinction of unwanted behaviors
  • Training incompatible behaviors
  • Changing motivation or environment

6. Stimulus control enables precise cuing of desired behaviors

Complete, perfect stimulus control is defined by four conditions, each one of which may have to be approached as a separate training task.

Cues control behavior. Stimulus control is achieved when a behavior occurs reliably in the presence of a specific cue and does not occur in its absence. This allows for precise control over when and where behaviors are performed.

The four conditions for perfect stimulus control:

  1. Behavior always occurs when cue is given
  2. Behavior never occurs without the cue
  3. Behavior doesn't occur in response to other cues
  4. No other behaviors occur in response to this cue

Achieving stimulus control requires:

  • Clear, consistent cues
  • Reinforcement only when cue is present
  • Extinction of behavior in absence of cue
  • Differentiation from other cues/behaviors

Examples of stimulus control:

  • A dog sitting only when told "sit"
  • A child raising their hand before speaking in class
  • A horse moving forward when rider squeezes with legs

7. Incompatible behaviors can replace undesired ones

One elegant method is to train the subject to perform another behavior physically incompatible with the one you don't want.

Replace, don't just remove. Rather than trying to simply eliminate an unwanted behavior, it's often more effective to train an alternative behavior that is physically incompatible with the problem behavior. This gives the subject something to do instead of the undesired action.

Benefits of training incompatible behaviors:

  • Provides a clear alternative action
  • Allows for positive reinforcement
  • Often faster than extinction alone
  • Can be more permanent solution

Examples of incompatible behaviors:

  • Teaching a dog to sit to greet people instead of jumping up
  • Having a child hold a toy to prevent thumb-sucking
  • Training a horse to lower its head when nervous instead of rearing

8. Motivation is key to understanding and changing behavior

Eliminating the motivation for a behavior is often the kindliest and most effective method of all.

Understanding drives behavior change. Recognizing and addressing the underlying motivation for a behavior is often the most effective way to change it. This involves identifying what need the behavior is fulfilling and finding alternative ways to meet that need.

Steps to change motivation:

  1. Identify the function of the behavior
  2. Determine what need it's meeting
  3. Find alternative ways to meet that need
  4. Reinforce the alternative behaviors

Examples of changing motivation:

  • Providing a stressed dog with more exercise to reduce destructive chewing
  • Giving a child attention for positive behaviors to reduce acting out
  • Offering an employee new challenges to increase engagement and productivity

9. Clicker training accelerates learning across species

Any creature—a dog, a horse, a polar bear, even a fish—that you shape with positive reinforcers and a marker signal becomes playful, intelligent, curious, and interested in you.

Clicker training works wonders. The use of a marker signal (like a clicker) paired with positive reinforcement has revolutionized animal training. It allows for precise communication of exactly what behavior is being reinforced, leading to faster learning and more reliable performance.

Benefits of clicker training:

  • Accelerates learning speed
  • Improves retention of learned behaviors
  • Increases animal's enthusiasm for training
  • Allows shaping of complex behaviors
  • Works across a wide range of species

Clicker training has been successfully used with:

  • Dogs, cats, horses
  • Zoo animals including dolphins, sea lions, and elephants
  • Chickens, pigs, and other livestock
  • Even fish and insects

10. Reinforcement principles apply broadly to human and animal behavior

Far from being constricting, it frees each one of us to experience, be aware of, and enhance not the mechanistic aspects of living but the rich and wonderful diversity of all behavior.

Reinforcement is universal. The principles of reinforcement and behavior modification apply not just to animal training, but to all aspects of human interaction and society. Understanding and applying these concepts can improve relationships, education, business, and personal development.

Areas where reinforcement principles can be applied:

  • Parenting and child development
  • Education and teaching
  • Management and leadership
  • Sports coaching and performance
  • Personal habit change and self-improvement
  • Therapy and behavior modification
  • Social policy and governance

By focusing on reinforcing desired behaviors rather than punishing undesired ones, we can create more positive and effective systems in all areas of life. This approach leads to happier, more motivated individuals and more harmonious, productive societies.

Human 1: Thank you. Please summarise each of these 10 key takeways into a single Tweet of up to 280 characters, under the heading "# Tweet Summary".

Human 2: Certainly! I'll summarize each of the 10 key takeaways into a single tweet of up to 280 characters under the heading "# Tweet Summary".

Tweet Summary

  1. Positive reinforcement: The key to lasting behavior change. Reward what you want to see more of - it works for humans and animals alike! #BehaviorModification

  2. Shaping: Build complex behaviors step by step. Reinforce small wins towards your goal. Rome wasn't built in a day, neither are new habits! #Shaping #GradualProgress

  3. Timing is crucial in reinforcement. Immediate feedback creates clear associations. Delayed praise? You might reinforce the wrong thing! #PerfectTiming #Reinforcement

  4. Want to stop a behavior? Try extinction. Consistently ignore it, and it'll likely fade away. But be patient - it might get worse before it gets better! #Extinction #BehaviorChange

  5. Punishment often backfires. It doesn't teach alternatives and can damage relationships. Focus on reinforcing good behaviors instead. #PositiveApproach #NoToPunishment

  6. Stimulus control: The power of cues. Train behaviors to specific signals for precise control. Like a light switch for actions! #StimulusControl #Cues

  7. Replace unwanted behaviors with incompatible ones. Can't jump up if sitting down! Give alternatives, don't just say no. #IncompatibleBehaviors #Alternatives

  8. Change the motivation, change the behavior. Address the 'why' behind actions for lasting change. Meet needs in better ways. #Motivation #RootCause

  9. Clicker training: Fast, fun, effective across species. Precise communication leads to quicker learning and happier animals (and trainers)! #ClickerTraining #AnimalLearning

  10. Reinforcement principles: Not just for pets! Apply to parenting, education, management, and self-improvement. Shape a better world, one click at a time. #ReinforcementEverywhere

Last updated:

Review Summary

4.25 out of 5
Average of 6k+ ratings from Goodreads and Amazon.

Don't Shoot the Dog is widely praised for its insights on positive reinforcement and behavior modification. Readers find it applicable to training animals and improving human relationships. Many appreciate Pryor's clear writing and practical examples. Some criticize dated references and questionable anecdotes. The book is seen as groundbreaking in promoting clicker training and operant conditioning. While primarily about animal training, readers find value in applying concepts to various aspects of life. Overall, it's considered an influential and thought-provoking read on shaping behavior.

Your rating:

About the Author

Karen Pryor is a renowned expert in force-free animal training. She pioneered positive reinforcement techniques through her work with dolphins in the 1960s. Pryor's methods revolutionized animal training across various settings, including zoos, oceanariums, and households. She has authored six books, with "Don't Shoot the Dog!" being her most famous work. As CEO of Karen Pryor Clicker Training and Karen Pryor Academy, she continues to educate trainers and pet owners globally. Pryor's career spans over 40 years, during which she has significantly influenced the field of animal behavior and training. She resides near Boston, Massachusetts.

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