- Location
- Andorra and Spain
I don't know where the idea for this post came from
but here's my take on it.
There is a world of difference between saying the word "no", "ah-ah", "getoffthatyoulittlegit" and all those sorts of things in everyday life compared to during planned training. We are all human, and these things tend to slip out from time to time.
Does the dog find it aversive? Maybe. Is it a positive punishment? The only way to know this is to look at the data. It can only be classified as a positive punishment if the behaviour that preceded the word becomes less frequent over time. It has nothing to do with whether it stops the particular instance of the behaviour when you use it. We cannot define anything as a "reinforcer" or a "punisher" until we know how the frequency of the behaviour is affected. So it's very easy to throw phrases like "positive punishment" around, but often people are making wild assumptions. Just because something is aversive, it doesn't mean it's punishing the behaviour.
Anyway, I digress.
I don't think there's anyone who lives with dogs who can say, hand on heart, that they never say "no" to their dogs. It's what happens after that is the important thing. A good trainer will prick up their ears when they hear themselves saying it, and think, "Aha! This is a gap in my training!". The choice is then between choosing whether you care enough about the behaviour to fix it or not. If you do want to fix it, you come up with a training plan to do so.
And that's where the use of "no", for positive reinforcement trainers, has no place. Because we devise plans which don't need to tell the dog when he's doing something wrong, because we set up scenarios where this doesn't happen, and we gradually increase criteria to reach the desired outcome.
And I think this is where the confusion comes in. I was confused about it myself for a while. I said, "I don't say no to my dogs", and went out of my way to make sure I didn't. But the point shouldn't be "never say no to your dogs in daily life", but rather, "telling your dog he's wrong has no part in a good training plan". And, as I mentioned, if you do find yourself in the situation where you're having to tell your dog "no" frequently, just take it as information that maybe you have an issue you need to address through actual training.

There is a world of difference between saying the word "no", "ah-ah", "getoffthatyoulittlegit" and all those sorts of things in everyday life compared to during planned training. We are all human, and these things tend to slip out from time to time.
Does the dog find it aversive? Maybe. Is it a positive punishment? The only way to know this is to look at the data. It can only be classified as a positive punishment if the behaviour that preceded the word becomes less frequent over time. It has nothing to do with whether it stops the particular instance of the behaviour when you use it. We cannot define anything as a "reinforcer" or a "punisher" until we know how the frequency of the behaviour is affected. So it's very easy to throw phrases like "positive punishment" around, but often people are making wild assumptions. Just because something is aversive, it doesn't mean it's punishing the behaviour.
Anyway, I digress.
I don't think there's anyone who lives with dogs who can say, hand on heart, that they never say "no" to their dogs. It's what happens after that is the important thing. A good trainer will prick up their ears when they hear themselves saying it, and think, "Aha! This is a gap in my training!". The choice is then between choosing whether you care enough about the behaviour to fix it or not. If you do want to fix it, you come up with a training plan to do so.
And that's where the use of "no", for positive reinforcement trainers, has no place. Because we devise plans which don't need to tell the dog when he's doing something wrong, because we set up scenarios where this doesn't happen, and we gradually increase criteria to reach the desired outcome.
And I think this is where the confusion comes in. I was confused about it myself for a while. I said, "I don't say no to my dogs", and went out of my way to make sure I didn't. But the point shouldn't be "never say no to your dogs in daily life", but rather, "telling your dog he's wrong has no part in a good training plan". And, as I mentioned, if you do find yourself in the situation where you're having to tell your dog "no" frequently, just take it as information that maybe you have an issue you need to address through actual training.