- Location
- Andorra and Spain
This highlights the problem of coercion. Using food (or access to a resource) to get your dog to do something they don't want to do can damage trust. Coercion is subtly different to a lure; a lure is where you are using food to position a dog to perform a behaviour that is neutral (doesn't currently have any positive or negative associations). Coercion is using reinforcers such as food to get your dog to do something he doesn't like. Even if it works, I would argue that it's not best practice.Kipper quickly became averse to a drop in his eye, even with the temptation of a yoghurt spoon.
Using games like Chirag's Bucket Game to get true cooperative care is ideal - although you do still have to be careful that you are not using coercion. This is where it gets a bit confusing; if you remove a reinforcer when the dog looks away (a reinforcer being your attention, food or whatever) then you are using coercion. You have to reward the dog's choice to disengage. Something as simple as saying "my dog no longer wants to play, so I'll end the session and get on with my day" can be punishing for the dog and so they will tolerate something they otherwise wouldn't to avoid that punishment.
In the long-term, we should probably all be using classical conditioning to slowly build a positive emotional response to these processes. That takes time and a lot of patience! And, of course, in the meantime, things happen. Our dogs get eye infections that we have to deal with. My advice when this happens is to have a strategy which looks very different to your ongoing training. So, as you are doing, continue with the bucket game for future issues, but right now, have the "picture" of putting the drops into his eyes very, very different to your game, otherwise you run the risk of contaminating the bucket game with negative feelings. For example, if you are playing the bucket game in the living room, then when he has no choice, only apply his drops in the kitchen. Have a distinct cue that starts the bucket game. If you are asking him whether he is OK to continue, you had better be prepared for that answer to be "no", and you must respect that. If you're going to do what you want anyway, then you shouldn't be asking, as this damages trust. So for those scenarios where he has no choice, don't ask. Don't even try to play the game. Just say, "this is how it is", make it as minimally traumatic as possible, and then get on with your day. But over time practicing the bucket game, you will be able to get the "yes" answer more and more, so you can start bringing that into treatment programmes.