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Aggressive behaviour in dogs, the role of learning

Aggressive behaviour in dogs, the role of learning
Aggressive behaviour in dogs, the role of learning
Aggressive Behaviour in dogs has become a major topic of scientific research in Northern Europe and USA. It ranks among the top problems presented to animal behaviour therapists. Research into the influence of owner/dog interactions on the development of aggression has yielded contradictory results. However in Animal Behaviour Therapy the influence of the owner’s behaviour has proved to be a major factor in changing the animal’s aggressive behaviour. In principal, aggressive behaviour in dogs can be considered normal, species-specific behaviour, essential for survival. Learning and genotype both play a role in its development. The principles of learning are relatively unknown to the general public and so are rarely applied systematically in everyday dog training. Typical training procedures and have been found to reinforce aggressive behaviour in dogs. The aim of the paper will be to illustrate this using various case studies from animal behaviour therapy sessions and how problematic aggressive behaviour within dogs can be modified.
dog, aggression, behaviour, problem, therapy, training
Redhead, Ed
d2342759-2c77-45ef-ac0f-9f70aa5db0df
McBride, E. Anne
8f13b829-a141-4b67-b2d7-08f839972646
Bizo, Lewis A.
0d8d7110-0b45-47e8-9289-9389c4810b32
Redhead, Ed
d2342759-2c77-45ef-ac0f-9f70aa5db0df
McBride, E. Anne
8f13b829-a141-4b67-b2d7-08f839972646
Bizo, Lewis A.
0d8d7110-0b45-47e8-9289-9389c4810b32

Redhead, Ed, McBride, E. Anne and Bizo, Lewis A. (2006) Aggressive behaviour in dogs, the role of learning. Association for Behavior Analysis Annual Convention, Atlanta, USA. 25 - 29 May 2006.

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

Aggressive Behaviour in dogs has become a major topic of scientific research in Northern Europe and USA. It ranks among the top problems presented to animal behaviour therapists. Research into the influence of owner/dog interactions on the development of aggression has yielded contradictory results. However in Animal Behaviour Therapy the influence of the owner’s behaviour has proved to be a major factor in changing the animal’s aggressive behaviour. In principal, aggressive behaviour in dogs can be considered normal, species-specific behaviour, essential for survival. Learning and genotype both play a role in its development. The principles of learning are relatively unknown to the general public and so are rarely applied systematically in everyday dog training. Typical training procedures and have been found to reinforce aggressive behaviour in dogs. The aim of the paper will be to illustrate this using various case studies from animal behaviour therapy sessions and how problematic aggressive behaviour within dogs can be modified.

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More information

Published date: 2006
Venue - Dates: Association for Behavior Analysis Annual Convention, Atlanta, USA, 2006-05-25 - 2006-05-29
Keywords: dog, aggression, behaviour, problem, therapy, training

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 55300
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/55300
PURE UUID: edfc77f4-2003-402d-9d32-7ffd42c7c0b7
ORCID for Ed Redhead: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7771-1228

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 30 Jul 2008
Last modified: 09 Jun 2023 01:35

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Contributors

Author: Ed Redhead ORCID iD
Author: E. Anne McBride
Author: Lewis A. Bizo

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