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Quiz about Training Techniques There is more than one
Quiz about Training Techniques There is more than one

Training Techniques: There is more than one! Quiz


This quiz covers the variety of training techniques that exist to help teach different commands to dogs that learn in different manners.

A multiple-choice quiz by Jr_Dog_Expert. Estimated time: 6 mins.
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Time
6 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
310,653
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
15
Difficulty
Tough
Avg Score
8 / 15
Plays
1113
Last 3 plays: colbymanram (4/15), Guest 82 (13/15), Guest 90 (12/15).
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Question 1 of 15
1. How is positive reinforcement often abbreviated? Hint


Question 2 of 15
2. What do the abbreviations p+ and p- stand for?(respectively) Hint


Question 3 of 15
3. In ___________, an adverse stimulus is taken away in order to increase a behavior. Hint


Question 4 of 15
4. Negative punishment involves employing an adverse stimulus.


Question 5 of 15
5. Which of the following is an example of a non-operant technique? Hint


Question 6 of 15
6. _________ is a term used when a technique is used to end a behavior. Hint


Question 7 of 15
7. Which training technique involves enticing the dog to obey a command? Example: Moving a treat over the dog's head to get it to sit.

Answer: (One word (not an abbreviation))
Question 8 of 15
8. When you are "charging the clicker", what are you doing? Hint


Question 9 of 15
9. Flooding is a process to treat which of the following? Hint


Question 10 of 15
10. A dog owner is teaching his dog to sit down and stay instead of lunging at people passing by. What method is he using? Hint


Question 11 of 15
11. Your dog becomes panicked whenever he hears thunder and at times he is hard to control. Which training technique would be the best approach to this problem? Hint


Question 12 of 15
12. An owner is trying to teach his dog to dumbbell retrieve. The first thing he does is click when the dog looks at the dumbbell, then clicks when the dog touches it with his nose, later clicks if the dog takes the dumbbell in his mouth, lastly clicking when the dog picks it off the floor. What method is being employed here? Hint


Question 13 of 15
13. Physically moving, pushing, or grabbing the dog in order to get it to teach them what a command means is an example of what training technique? Hint


Question 14 of 15
14. Which of the following is an example of a classically conditioned response? Hint


Question 15 of 15
15. Bite inhibition in puppies is developed with their littermates. When a pup bites another pup too hard, the one that was bitten yelps and ignores the offending puppy. In theory bite inhibition is learned through what technique? Hint



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Most Recent Scores
Apr 22 2024 : colbymanram: 4/15
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quiz
Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. How is positive reinforcement often abbreviated?

Answer: R+

Positive reinforcement is usually written as r+. P+ is the abbreviation for positive punishment. Pos RF was made up.
2. What do the abbreviations p+ and p- stand for?(respectively)

Answer: Positive punishment and negative punishment.

The common abbreviation for positive punishment is p+ and for negative punishment it's p-. Although it seems plausible to say that p+ is to add a punishment and p- is to take it away, this isn't completely accurate. In positive punishment one does add an adverse stimulus to decrease a behavior but for negative punishment we take away a pleasurable stimulus to decrease a behavior.
3. In ___________, an adverse stimulus is taken away in order to increase a behavior.

Answer: Negative reinforcement

The thing to always remember with reinforcers and punishments is that any reinforcement (positive and negative) is done with the goal of 'increasing' a behavior and punishment (positive and negative) has the goal of 'decreasing' a behavior.
4. Negative punishment involves employing an adverse stimulus.

Answer: False

It is a common misconception that something that has the term "negative" is bad and that something contains "positive" is good; however, in dog training terminology positive simply means to add and negative is to subtract. In this case, negative punishment is to "take away" a stimulus as a punishment; there is no adverse stimulus involved.
5. Which of the following is an example of a non-operant technique?

Answer: Slowly pulling the dog's front legs forward while it is sitting in order to get it to lie.

Non-operant techniques involve making the dog obey a command by pushing, pulling, or luring it a certain way to make the dog do the action that goes with the command. Pulling the front legs forward to get the dog to lie is a prime example because the owner is making the dog do the action. Non-operant techniques are not very effective if they are the only methods used in the training program.

However they are useful to teach the dog what exactly a command is asking of them; after that it should obey a command on cue.
6. _________ is a term used when a technique is used to end a behavior.

Answer: Extinction

Extinction is a term used when one is eliminating a behavior. Ignoring a dog that is soliciting attention in an unacceptable manner is a form of extinction. However, during the extinction process the targeted behavior may temporarily increase, this is called an extinction burst.

In the case of the soliciting dog, the extinction burst would be an increase of the soliciting behavior e.g. barking or jumping. For the behavior to be stopped no reinforcement must be given.
7. Which training technique involves enticing the dog to obey a command? Example: Moving a treat over the dog's head to get it to sit.

Answer: lure

Luring is a non-operant training technique used to establish what a command is asking of the dog. Simply put this method involves taking a treat (or toy) and moving it a certain way/direction in order to get the dog to comply with a given command. The example given above is a good way of illustrating it or another scenario would be moving a treat downward and away from the dog in order to get it to lie.
8. When you are "charging the clicker", what are you doing?

Answer: Allowing the dog to associate the clicker sound with treats.

Charging the clicker means that you are allowing your pooch to understand that the clicking sound means something good. This is done by clicking and then giving a treat, and doing this repeated times. This is useful in that it effectively reinforces the desired behavior when the click is timed with the action.
9. Flooding is a process to treat which of the following?

Answer: Fear

Flooding is a technique to help dogs with fears of certain objects, it involves forcing the dog to be surrounded or near the fear-causing stimulus to extinguish the fear. This method's effectiveness is highly debated but is nonetheless used by some.
10. A dog owner is teaching his dog to sit down and stay instead of lunging at people passing by. What method is he using?

Answer: Counterconditioning

Counterconditioning is the act of teaching the dog a certain behavior or action that is incompatible with the undesirable one. The concept behind this technique is that the dog should not be able to do both things at once. In this example had the undesirable behavior been barking then telling the dog to sit wouldn't have been effective because the dog can still sit and bark.
11. Your dog becomes panicked whenever he hears thunder and at times he is hard to control. Which training technique would be the best approach to this problem?

Answer: Systematic desensitization

In this case, desensitization is the best option. This involves gradually exposing your dog to the fear causing stimulus slowly at first and gradually working your way to the real thing. With the thunder fearful dog, the owner would want to get a recording of thunder, play it at a low volume first and slowly turn up the volume if the pooch doesn't react negatively. Rewarding the dog for good behavior is vital to teach the pooch that it is doing the right thing by not panicking.

Some teach hunting dogs not to be scared of gunshots using this technique.
12. An owner is trying to teach his dog to dumbbell retrieve. The first thing he does is click when the dog looks at the dumbbell, then clicks when the dog touches it with his nose, later clicks if the dog takes the dumbbell in his mouth, lastly clicking when the dog picks it off the floor. What method is being employed here?

Answer: Shaping

This is a technique known as shaping. It is considered one of the harder but more effective techniques that one can use to teach a certain behavior or action. It involves slowly working your way up to the final action. With teaching dumbbell retrieve we start by rewarding simply looking at the dumbbell and after some time we work up to actually picking up and bringing the dumbbell.

This example does not illustrate modeling, r-, or CCDS (counterconditioning + desensitization).
13. Physically moving, pushing, or grabbing the dog in order to get it to teach them what a command means is an example of what training technique?

Answer: Modeling

This is a non-operant training technique called modeling or physical modeling. What one does is grabs or pushes a certain part of the dog's body in order to teach them what a command is asking of the them. This is not abusive training because modeling should be slow and gentle; never push a dog that is resisting too much as this may hurt them as well as make the training process unpleasant.

A good example is pushing slightly on a dog's lower backside in order to get them to sit.
14. Which of the following is an example of a classically conditioned response?

Answer: Dog becomes excited when he hears you say "Let's go for a walk".

This is an example of a classically conditioned response because the dog has learned that the phrase "let's go for a walk" 'precedes' a walk; no behavior is reinforced or punished. All other responses use operant conditioning in order to decrease or increase a behavior; p- teaches the whining dog that he will get no scraps by whining, r- teaches a dog to retrieve the dumbbell because an adverse stimulus is removed when he does, and p+ decreases the pulling behavior because pulling adds an adverse stimulus.
15. Bite inhibition in puppies is developed with their littermates. When a pup bites another pup too hard, the one that was bitten yelps and ignores the offending puppy. In theory bite inhibition is learned through what technique?

Answer: Negative punishment

Because the goal is to avoid biting hard (decreasing a behavior) this is a punishment, and in this case since it is the attention that is 'taken away' it is negative, thus bite inhibition is learned through negative punishment (p-). Classical and pavlovian conditioning are, in general terms, the same thing and are not exemplified here.
Source: Author Jr_Dog_Expert

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor crisw before going online.
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