An association between two
events. Made famous by Pavlov's dogs,
classical conditioning is the process whereby two
events become so closely associated that one always
predicts the other. Pavlov demonstrated
that by ringing a bell when ever he fed his dogs,
eventually the bell itself was sufficient to cause
the physical reaction of 'drooling' that was
previously only caused be the presence of food.
It is this process of classical conditioning which
allows us to use a clicker to mark the behaviour we
wish to train in our dogs.
Charging a clicker.
By repeatedly following random clicks with a treat
or reward of some sort, the click itself takes
on the characteristics of the reward and is
therefore able to reinforce the dog's behaviour.
This charging process is only necessary once for
each dog, but is essential to carry out before
clicker training commences.
A temporary association.
Typically classical conditioning may be temporary.
That is to say if the two events are not associated
with one another for a while, then the
association between them breaks down and the
training effect is lost. For this reason,
we always follow the click with a reward as soon as
possible. However a small gap in time between
the two does not seem to diminish the power of the
click, and it is this very useful phenomenon,
which allows us to click and strengthen behaviour
even when we cannot reach our dog. The
reward can be given after we have relocated.
Provided the time elapsed is small, and/or we
do not break the association too often, the
clicker will maintain its power.
Next
- What is great about clicker training and
when is it most useful?