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Whenever I see an animal show, I understand the animal is fed a treat as a reward for performing some trick (whether it be jumping through a hoop, walking on hind legs, or some other unnatural activity), but how to teach the animal that when you make such-a-such motion with your hand/arms they should perform that activity? Do they watch a human then mimic? Watch an already-trained animal then mimic? Physically taken through the motion in gentle baby steps, or via some other method? Is there an established criteria that animal rights groups have approved?

2007-01-13 14:35:58 · 8 answers · asked by Frank L 1 in Science & Mathematics Zoology

8 answers

you gently direct them to do what you want them to do, then reward good behavior. for example: gently press down a dog's butt while saying 'sit' and when the dog sits, you give the dog a treat. you can apply this process to just about anything, as long as you break it down into simple steps.

2007-01-13 14:40:29 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Most all mammals have an instinct to mimic there parents to learn how to survive. This instinct is carried over to curiosity to mimic other animal actions as well. Dogs have another trait in them that may be in other animals as well.As dogs naturally learn their social structure they figure out which dog is master of the pack they are eager to please the "master". This trait makes it easy to get the dog to do what you want he/she to do relatively easy. Other animals may not be as easy to get results. Also birds and chickens can be trained to do tricks too. I think animals including humans just like to mimic the actions that they see. This answer is just a educated guess im not an expert on the subject

2007-01-13 14:54:00 · answer #2 · answered by Tommiecat 7 · 0 0

They force the animal to do the trick . If they get the hang of it, a treat will be rewarded. If not, people will whip the animal for bad behaviour. Circuses might seem jolly and happy when they are performing, but behind the scenes, everything turns unpleasent

2007-01-13 18:18:10 · answer #3 · answered by Cheesecakeextreme 2 · 0 0

Hmmm...yep, i could ought to accept as true with you there. i ended going to the circus over 10 years in the past once I did a sprint examine and found out lots of the innovations used and the residing circumstances of the animals. A zoo of direction is distinctive, via fact those are with regard to the maintenance of species, no longer tricks and so on.

2016-12-12 10:53:13 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Behaviorist methodology holds sway in animal training. Classical and operant conditioning. Evolutionary methods are years from coming on line. Cesar Milan does not count as one evolutionarily informed. Read, " Don't Shoot the Dog ", by Karen Pryor. The outline of the behaviorist training methodology.

2007-01-13 14:44:12 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

well hello? the trainer goes over the stuff alot like my dog to sit i just patted her but down and when she sat i said Sit. i did it constantly finally she learned they show the dogs

2007-01-13 14:45:04 · answer #6 · answered by mary 2 · 0 0

Repetition.

2007-01-13 14:43:30 · answer #7 · answered by robert m 7 · 0 1

it gtz coaxed wif thingz plus yearz of training

2007-01-13 18:21:19 · answer #8 · answered by mooz_234 b 1 · 0 0

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