“No” Is Not a Habits . . . However That is Not the Downside with Saying It


Lewis, a brown and white dog, is lying on a leather couch holding a snuffle mat between his paws. He is looking at the camera.

I don’t assume this publish goes to win a reputation contest, however right here goes anyway. I can’t get it off my thoughts.

Trainers frequently work exhausting to show folks options to endlessly saying “No!” to their canines. Even these of us who know the pitfalls of the behavior lapse into it once in a while.

However I appear to disagree with many others about what precisely these pitfalls are.

Right here’s why I feel yelling “No!” is a foul concept: most people who find themselves doing it haven’t taught it as a cue for a conduct educated with constructive reinforcement. It finally ends up as an aversive methodology and carries all the standard potential for fallout. It depends first on a startle response. If the canine habituates, then folks escalate the aversives.

However that’s not the objection I often hear.

The Widespread Objection to “No”

I learn it once more the opposite day, in a dialogue advising somebody who was coping with an undesirable conduct by her canine. She had been telling her canine “No!” when he carried out the conduct. A number of folks chimed in, stating two associated issues: “no” just isn’t a conduct, and saying “No!” didn’t inform the canine what he ought to do.

Each true statements. However they level to a failure in coaching, not some magical property (or lack of property) of the phrase.

Eileen is sitting on a day bed reading a book about behavior. Her three dogs are with her, doing "naughty" things like pulling trash out of a wastebasket.
A second when it may need been tempting to say, “No”

The assertion that “no” doesn’t inform the canine what to do can be true for each single verbal cue we use—we now have to train the affiliation. As an example, merely saying the phrase “flip round” doesn’t give the canine any details about what we wish them to do, both. A cue and a conduct are two various things. We practice the latter and affiliate it with the previous.

R+ trainers generally say two issues which might be contradictory.

  1. On one hand, we inform newbies any phrase could be a cue. That is true. “Lightbulb” can cue sit. “Resonate” can cue the canine to take a look at me. Trainers simply have to recollect them and have the ability to train the canines. Cues don’t even must be phrases. A cue could be a hand on a doorknob, the sound of a automotive approaching, a time of day, or the odor of vinegar. This takes some time for many of us to grasp, as a result of the language side is usually far more salient to us people than anything. And we are likely to backslide. We persistently combine up the that means of the phrase with its operate as a discriminative stimulus. I focus on this in my weblog publish, “Good Sit!”
  2. However then we additionally inform people who “no” just isn’t a conduct. That’s additionally true, however not likely related. Once we say “sit,” “down,” or “lightbulb,” these aren’t behaviors both after they come out of our mouths. They’re cues. “No” just isn’t a conduct, but it surely doesn’t must be. It simply wants to point reinforcement is accessible for a conduct. We don’t say {that a} hand on a doorknob or the odor of vinegar can’t be cues as a result of they aren’t canine behaviors.

Singling out “no” as uniquely meaningless isn’t logical.

The Actual Downside with No

Eileen is sitting in a chair outdoors. Her young dog Clara has put her head under the arm of the chair and is prodding Eileen's breast.
A second once I undoubtedly mentioned one thing suboptimal

I consider the basis downside with “no” is that folks don’t practice it; the phrase doesn’t level to a conduct that can be adopted with constructive reinforcement. And if saying it doesn’t efficiently interrupt the canine, folks often escalate. So “No!” involves predict aversive circumstances: nagging, yelling, stomping, clapping, and even bodily aversives like hitting.

Canine trainers rightly advise their purchasers to begin over and use one other phrase if they will train a “leave-it” or an interrupter, as a result of most of us hardly ever say the phrase “no” to canines properly.

However we will. I’ve a buddy who practiced for ages to make use of “no” as her leave-it cue for her service canine so she might say it in a nice and impartial tone of voice.

After I Yelled “No!”

Lewis, a brown and white dog, is on his hind legs, sniffing a container full of food on a counter.
A reenactment of Lewis’ countersurfing with a tempting however secure meals

Consider it or not, I yelled “No!” on the identical day I began this text, proper after I used to be pondering this entire factor.

I make a baked dessert out of oatmeal, egg whites, almond butter, dried cranberries, and darkish chocolate. A lot of darkish chocolate. I warmed a bit of it that evening on a plate and put it on the counter. what’s coming. I rotated and Lewis was countersurfing. He had his nostril up, sniffing the dessert, about to take a chew.

Regardless that I’ve taught Lewis a leave-it cue, I panicked, yelled “NO!” and clapped my fingers. I did precisely what I’ve been describing. I yelled, hoping to startle him, and when that didn’t work immediately, I clapped, with the identical objective.

What did Lewis do?

He didn’t cringe or cower or run away. He slid slowly down from the counter and calmly got here to me, anticipating a deal with. I gave him a handful, then I eliminated the dessert from his attain.

I haven’t educated the phrase “no” as a cue, however I’ve educated a number of different phrases that operate to interrupt, and he’s accustomed particularly to being known as away from the counter. So to him, it didn’t matter what I mentioned, nor, apparently, how I mentioned it. Lewis related a conduct (reorienting to me) with my saying “No!” due to different issues I educated.

I taught him “Pas” (go away it), “Excuse me,” (put all 4 paws on the bottom), and “Lewis” in a excessive, singsong tone (come right here). None of these phrases or phrases “was a conduct” when he first heard them both, however now they signify great things if he performs the conduct I’ve related to them. And by generalization, so did the “no.”

I used to coach “Hey!” I fastidiously conditioned it to foretell nice issues for canines who come to me, since that was what often got here out of my mouth once I panicked about one thing that affected a canine. I even practiced it in an irritated tone, so the great reinforcer hopefully counterconditioned my cranky tone. You possibly can see a demo right here. I ought to do that with Lewis as nicely.

There’s a lesson to be realized right here. The constructive reinforcement-taught cue for Lewis to get down from the counter is: “The woman says one thing whereas I’ve my toes up on the counter.” Sure, any phrase could be a cue, however usually it’s not the phrase in any respect. We people are those caught specializing in the phrases.

And naturally, I’m not suggesting that yelling “No!” to our canines is an efficient factor. I’ve delineated the issue with it already. It labored out for me in that on the spot with out fallout, however solely as a result of it resembled actual coaching I had achieved. We would not have been so fortunate. It will have been safer if I’d come out with one in all my educated cues. I must apply extra, or possibly I ought to situation “No!” in addition to “Hey!”.

Not Solely a Semantic Argument

Zani, a small black and rust hound mix, is lying on a mat looking up at the camera. There is a big pile of pieces of something she has ripped up in front of her.
I don’t assume I ever mentioned “No!” to Zani

I assumed exhausting earlier than publishing this. It could give folks the misunderstanding that I’m supporting yelling “No!”. I’m not! Or it could appear pointlessly choosy. Possibly.

However my motivation is sensible. Specializing in the phrase “no” and what it means or doesn’t imply feeds into the concept cues drive conduct. If we middle our argument on the phrase “no” not being a conduct, we’re very near implying that phrases like “sit” and “down” are behaviors. And this may strengthen our unconscious tendency to consider that canines robotically perceive language the best way we do.

That’s the draw back of claiming, “No just isn’t a conduct.” It provides to the confusion about phrases which might be each cues and verbal descriptions of behaviors. Generally cues could describe behaviors, but it surely’s not mandatory that they do.

I perceive that the statements folks make about “no” that hassle me are shortcuts. Trainers don’t often give a lecture on discriminative stimuli when first introducing folks to R+ strategies. And it’s true that folks yelling “No!” aren’t often considering of what they need the canine to do; they’re considering of what they need the canine to cease doing. So it’s nice to introduce the idea of coaching with constructive reinforcement and get folks occupied with constructing incompatible behaviors as an alternative of repeatedly reacting within the second.

I’m not a professional coach; I don’t work with people coaching their canines on daily basis. If telling people who “no doesn’t inform the canine what to do” helps most of them break the behavior, then nice.

However I wager there are others like me who finally need to perceive these things about cues just a little higher, and the claims about “no” can gradual that down. I do know, as a result of it’s taken me 10 years to unravel even just a little of it for myself.

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