Behavioral Conditioning
What I want to do is train my dog to shake with either paw upon request.
If I
say "right" I want him to raise his right paw and the same for the left.
I
would use operant and classical conditioning to reach the goal of teaching
this
trick to my dog. I must condition the dog to shake by using
positive
reinforcement. The dog (Max) already puts his paw on me when I grab
his head so
I will act like I am going to reach for his head and when he
puts his paw on me
I will say, "shake." Every time he puts his paw on me
after I say shake I
will give him a liver treat. Once I have conditioned him
to shake it will then
be time to differentiate right from left. I want the
words, "shake right"
and "shake left " to be the conditioned stimulus (CS)
and the raising of the
appropriate paw to be the conditioned response (CR). I
will condition the
unconditioned response (UCR), shaking; the unconditioned
stimulus (UCS), tapping
his leg, by using operant conditioning and liver
treats as positive
reinforcement. Day 1: I began by acting like I was going
to grab Max’ head.
Just as I suspected he put his paw on my arm. I tapped
his leg and I gave him a
treat as a positive reinforcer. I am using operant
conditioning at this point in
order to establish an unconditioned stimulus
(taping Max’ leg) and an
unconditioned response (putting his paw in my hand).
Once I have shaped this
behavior I can then go on to the second phase using
Pavlov’s classical
conditioning. Day 2: After two days of fixed ratio
reinforcement, Max is
beginning to give a conditioned response every time I
tap his leg. Every time I
tap his leg we exchange a paw for a liver treat. I
am using continuous
reinforcement today. Day 3: I have switched to using
variable interval
reinforcement. I will only give him a liver treat whenever
I feel like it. Max
is now learning that when I tap his leg he is to give me
his paw. I am actually
conditioning an unconditioned response. I am still
using variable interval
reinforcement but I only gave him two treats the
whole day. Day 4: It is now
time to switch over to classical conditioning. I
have the active ingredient to
do a Pavlov classic experiment. My UCS is now
the leg tap and the UCR is Max
shaking. I no longer have to use any
reinforcement. Every time I tap Max’ leg,
he shakes. Day 5: I now introduce
the words "shake right," the neutral
stimulus (NS), as I tap the appropriate
leg. I am beginning to get the
conditioned response, which is lifting the
appropriate paw. Day 6: I now
introduce the words "shake left," as I tap the
appropriate leg. I now have
to reintroduce positive reinforcement. I am
afraid Max might be forgetting the
CR. He is not wanting to cooperate.
Day 7: The NS alone now produces a
conditioned response, thereby becoming a
CS. I must use variable interval
reinforcement to insure the CR continues. I
will use this schedule of
reinforcement so that Max won’t know when to expect
a treat. I figure that if
he doesn’t know when to expect a treat, he will
give the CR to the CS more
often than not. Day 8: When I say, "shake right,"
Max will lift his right
paw. When I say, "shake left" he lifts the left paw.
I will continue to use
the variable interval reinforcement to maintain the
behavior. This was a lot of
fun and my dog just got smarter. I think I got
smarter too. I think I could
teach Max to do whatever I want him to as long
as I follow the simple steps of
conditioning, classical and operant.