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My position on shock collars
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| Summary:
I am opposed to the widespread use of shock
collars in dog training, particularly in the hands of novice trainers.
I support legislation to regulate their use, including a total ban on
shock collars. At most, shock collars should be used only by
highly trained professionals who are certified and licensed for their
use. Shock collars should not be used for ordinary pet dog
training and for solving behavioral problems in dogs. In technical
terms, shock collars allow trainers to apply a combination of positive
punishment and negative reinforcement to modify a dog's behavior. Shock
collars work by causing pain, which the dog seeks to avoid.
Shock collars use an electrical current to cause pain. At lower
levels the pain is sharp and resembles being poked with a hot needle.
At higher levels, the tingling sensation of an electrical shock can be
perceived radiating between the "live" electrode point and the ground
point. The potential for misuse and abuse of the shock collar is
enormous, potentially greater than that of other methods of positive punishment
in dog training. |
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- What are shock collars?
Shock collars are sold under a variety of
other names, including electronic collars, e-collars (not to be
confused with the cones known as Elizabethan collars), and remote
trainers. As "remote trainers," shock collars come in paired
components: 1. a collar that goes around the dog's neck,
that is a receiver of a radio-transmitted signal; and 2. a
transmitter unit that sends the signal, that is held by the trainer.
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- How do shock collars work,
technically? When the
trainer pushes a button on the transmitter, a signal is sent to the
receiver in the collar. The collar has two "points" on the
side against the dog's skin. The transmitter sets off an
electrical current in the collar that travels between the live
electrode and the ground. The sensation of the electrical
current sets off pain receptors in the subject's skin, that are
normally there for detecting heat.
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- How do shock
collars work to modify a dog's behavior? Shock
collars are designed to be a precise, emotionally neutral, and
remote or distance tool for applying a combination of positive
punishment and negative reinforcement in modifying the behavior of
dogs. They work by making a dog experience pain until the dog
performs the behavior that the trainer wants. Training a dog
with a shock collar is difficult to do correctly, because their use
requires precise timing, solid understanding of principles of animal
training, and an unemotional approach to training on the trainer's
part.
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- How effective is the use of
positive punishment in animal training? The
shock collar is only one tool of positive punishment in dog
training. Until about 10 years ago, the use of positive
punishment ("corrections") and negative reinforcement was considered
the norm in dog training. However, studies on animal training
and long experience by trainers of species of animals other than
dogs support the use of positive reinforcement as the most effective
training tool. I go into more detail on another page (see "Punishment").
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- If punishment and use of pain or fear
are not the best means of training dogs, are these methods still in
use? Today there is something
of a resurgence of the use of pain and fear in dog training and the
rekindling of superstitious methods not based in science. A
combination of factors may be involved (see Punishment page).
Today shock collars are sold over the counter in "big box" and other
pet stores and over the internet, to anyone regardless of their
knowledge of dog training or proper use of the shock collar.
Shock collars are also advocated by a number of professional dog
trainers for use by the general public.
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- Why do users of shock collars advocate
their use? Shock collars
can have rapid and dramatic effects on the behavior of a dog.
In most cases, the dog quickly exhibits behaviors that the owner
desires. These behaviors include coming when called, staying where
told, and walking right next to the owner's side. Shock
collars have particular application in hunting and herding, when
dogs are engaged in highly instinctive activities at a distance from
the dog's handler.
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- Why not use shock collars then?
Although punishment-based training can be rapid and effective, use
of pain and fear to modify a dog's behavior causes dogs stress to
varying and often extreme degrees. Use of pain and fear to change
the behavior of dogs can also have potentially serious side effects,
such as increasing aggression. Other methods not requiring
pain and fear are just as effective and no more difficult to use
correctly than methods causing pain and fear. Conversely, when
the two class of methods (pain-based versus reward-based) are not
done correctly, pain-based methods have permanent and undesirable
effects on dogs' behavior whereas reward-based methods simply result
in an untrained dog when incorrectly applied. Many trainers
consider the use of fear and pain to be unethical as well as
unnecessary.
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- Why
would anyone persist in using a method that can cause considerable
pain or harm to their dog? Most
of this generation of shock collar users say that shock collars do
not cause pain or fear. The following are common statements by
shock collar advocates:
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The shock collar is a "force free" method
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The shock collar is only a neutral cue
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The modern shock collar no longer causes a dog to
be shocked, unlike the original shock collars
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The modern shock collar can be set to such low
levels that the dog does not feel pain
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The modern shock collar feels like a tickle
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The modern shock collar
feels like a tap
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- How can one evaluate these statements?
Anyone can evaluate the above
statements, in either of two ways: First, a person can test
the collar on him or herself to see how it feels at different
levels, and can watch dogs subjected to the collar at levels of
"stimulation" that are proper for modifying that dog's behavior.
Second, a person can evaluate a trainer who is using a shock collar with a
dog and compare the results with behavioral learning theory.
The trainer's actions and the dog's resulting behavior will reveal
what method of training that trainer is applying to the dog.
- To take these two steps, I began by testing myself with a "modern"
generation shock collar, as follows:
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A report of my shock
collar self-test:
I used a Dogtra 200 NCP Gold. It has a rheostat
dial. I used the back of my arm so that the skin wouldn't be too
sensitive, such as a dog's skin might not be. I could feel nothing
when the dial was at zero, which makes sense as one way to turn it
"off". I had to work my courage up for a long time to do this
test. I considered the statement that the shock collar at low
levels feels like a tickle or a tap, so I first tried about a 5 out
of 100 (max). I felt nothing. I then set the dial higher in
small increments.
I could feel nothing until the setting of 20.
Then I felt a sharp pain, like being stuck with a hot needle. There
was a definite feeling of heat. The pain was sharp, a point
sensation. It did not feel pleasant, and it did not feel neutral.
It felt absolutely nothing like a "tap" as in a tap on the shoulder,
which would be a blunt, non-painful sensation. Importantly, at the
lowest level that I could detect the stimulus, I perceived the
feeling as pain and not as another kind of physical sensation.
I went higher on the rheostat and got up to 40
before I couldn't make myself go any higher. At that point, the
sharpness of the feeling was greater and the sense of heat was
greater. But by 40 there was also a feeling of electrical current.
I got the familiar buzzing feeling that you might remember if you've
ever touched a live wire. In other words, I definitely perceived
the feeling as shock, not tap or a tickle. My skin started to
tingle between the live electrode point and the ground point.
Clearly a current was travelling between the two points on the shock
collar, and it seemed to be travelling not only on the skin but in
the muscle. I suspect it radiates out in an electromagnetic field
pattern between the two points. Interestingly, I did not know which
point was which on the Dogtra, as the two points appear the same,
until I applied the shock to myself. In the Tritronics model, the
ground point is black and the live point is colored according to the
level of intensity of the shock each point type (5 in all)
delivers..
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Comments about the
results of this self-test:
The shock collar users state that the feeling is
not one of a shock in the "new generation" collars, but when asked,
no one could explain the physics behind how the collars actually
work if that were the case. They also state that the feeling is
neutral and not painful, again, without explaining how the shock
collars work to convince the dog to change its behavior. Although
one can argue that I do not know how the shock collar feels to a
dog, I still ask shock collar users to explain how a shock collar
works to change a dog's behavior, if it does not work by positive
punishment and negative reinforcement.
If you are a dog trainer who instructs others on how
to train, or if you are considering using or are using a shock collar to
train your dog, it is important for you to test yourself with a shock
collar, using the same procedures that should be used to test a dog for
its sensitivity level. That is, you start with the lowest setting and
note at which setting you can first detect any sensation and then
continue to increase the intensity of the shock stimulus until you reach
a level that you would take actions to avoid.
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If you are an all-positive reinforcement trainer,
you should still take the self-test in order to be fully informed
about shock collars so that you can better understand how they are
used and the effects that they have on dogs. You need this
information to be credible when you discuss the use of shock collars
with others.
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If you want to train a dog with a shock collar,
in my opinion you must take this self-test for the same reasons:
To use such a powerful tool correctly, you must be fully informed
about shock collars so that you can better understand how they
should be used and the effects that they have on your dog. If
you are using a shock collar at the advice of a professional
trainer, you should verify first hand, for yourself, what the
sensation of a shock collar feels like and whether its effects are
equivalent to a tickle or a tap or whether the shock collar causes
pain.
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My reasons for opposing the use of shock collars: |
- In general, I oppose the use of punishment in dog training,
particularly as the foundation method of training. I explain
more of my rational on another page "Punishment."
- All training devices designed to apply positive punishment
through discomfort, pain, or fear can be misused and abused, even to
extreme levels, such hanging dogs by a choke collar. However,
the shock collar has in my opinion the greatest potential to be
misused during regular and routine use.
- Correct use of the shock collar requires an experienced trainer,
a person not only educated in the technical features of a shock
collar, not only educated and experienced in the use of positive
punishment and negative reinforcement in training, but also fully
educated in principles of animal training, dog behavior and how to
read dogs' behavior correctly. This level of education and
experience, that would be the minimum required for correct use of
the shock collar, cannot be achieved without years of study and
experience and is highly unlikely to be achieved by average members
of the public.
- The shock collar clearly works by causing pain, and when a dog
is first introduced to a shock collar, its use also causes the dog
fear and stress. The shock function of remote collars is
entirely designed for use as a tool of positive punishment and
negative reinforcement. Trainers desiring a long-distance cue
for training their dogs may elect to use shockless, vibration or
auditory paging remote collars.
- Shock collars even used correctly arguably meet the broad
criteria that define torture, specifically:
- infliction of pain or fear by one being upon
another
- inflictor of pain and fear is an authority
figure
- receiver of pain and fear perceives him or
herself as helpless
- motivation for infliction of pain and fear
may be to modify the behavior of the recipient and the only relief
from pain or fear is for the recipient to choose
the specific behavior intended by the inflictor of pain or fear,
such as in political torture for gaining information or
confessions.
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Note: Although you might think it is extreme to
compare a dog training tool to torture, medical ethicists and
professionals have precisely this debate all the time. In practicing
medicine and helping patients, caregivers may subject the patient to
painful and frightening procedures. The doctor or other caregiver
is an authority figure and the patient feels helpless. In
self-evaluation, medical professionals routinely keep this definition of
torture in mind as they practice medicine and evaluate their treatment
of patients. In one study (Schimmel et al. 1994), the investigators
asked whether empowering patients improved the medical outcomes of these
patients and discovered that it did. I believe that dog trainers
should rise to the same professional standards and subject their
methodology to the same scrutiny.
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- Therefore, because use of a shock collar to train dogs is
unnecessary and potentially can cause great harm and suffering, I am
now opposed to the use of shock collars, certainly by novice
trainers, and support regulation of their use including strict
licensing for trained professionals only.
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