Abstract

Clicker training is considered a welfare-friendly way of teaching novel behaviors to animals because it is mostly based on the positive reinforcement. However, trainers largely vary in their way of applying this training technique. According to the most, a reward (e.g., food) should follow every click, while others claim that dogs learn faster when the reward is sometimes omitted. One argument against the use of partial rewarding is that it induces frustration in the animal, raising concerns over its welfare consequences. Here, we investigated the effect of partial rewarding not only on training efficacy (learning speed), but also on dogs’ affective state. We clicker-trained two groups of dogs: one group received food after every click while the other group received food only 60% of the time. Considering previous evidence of the influencing role of personality on reactions to frustrated expectations, we included measurements of dogs’ emotional reactivity. We compared the number of trials needed to reach a learning criterion and their pessimistic bias in a cognitive bias test. No difference between the two groups emerged in terms of learning speed; however, dogs that were partially rewarded during clicker training showed a more pessimistic bias than dogs that were continuously rewarded. Generally, emotional reactivity was positively associated with a more pessimistic bias. Partial rewarding does not improve training efficacy, but it is associated with a negatively valenced affective state, bringing support to the hypothesis that partial rewarding might negatively affect dogs’ welfare.

Highlights

  • Clicker training is a widely used technique to teach novel behaviors to dogs and other species by combining two forms of learning: classical and operant conditioning (Ferster and Skinner 1957; Skinner 1969)

  • Most practitioners advocate the use of continuous rewarding, arguing that removing the primary reinforcer would weaken the association with the secondary reinforcer that would become less effective in marking the correct behavior and in signaling the arrival of the reward (Pryor 1999; Fernandez 2001; Clayton 2005)

  • The goal of the present study was to evaluate whether dogs only partially rewarded during clicker training would learn faster and be negatively influenced in their affective state, than dogs that were continuously rewarded

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Summary

Introduction

Clicker training is a widely used technique to teach novel behaviors to dogs and other species by combining two forms of learning: classical and operant conditioning (Ferster and Skinner 1957; Skinner 1969) During such training, the individual’s behavior is reinforced by associating a specific response to an arbitrary stimulus through a positive reinforcer as in operant conditioning, through the use of a sound (a click, conditioned stimulus and secondary reinforcer). Most practitioners advocate the use of continuous rewarding, arguing that removing the primary reinforcer (e.g., food) would weaken the association with the secondary reinforcer that would become less effective in marking the correct behavior and in signaling the arrival of the reward (Pryor 1999; Fernandez 2001; Clayton 2005). The learning curve of animals being reinforced continuously or only partially does not differ (D’Amato et al 1958; Fox and King 1961; Armus et al 1962)

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