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đïž Kynotalk #117: Dr. Stewart Hilliard returns for a short, focused episode sparked by a thoughtful YouTube commentâchallenging a common narrative in dog training: âpositive-only,â errors in training, and whether sport/Agility dogs are truly trained without pressure.Stewart adds nuance: what errorless learning actually means, where the concept comes from (Skinner and colleagues), and why âerrorsâ are often an artifact of imperfect teaching procedures rather than an unavoidable part of learning. At the same time, he explains why building resilienceâand teaching dogs to work through frustration/adversityâstill matters, not just in sport, but in everyday life and high-demand working contexts.A key segment dives into omission cues / Pavlovian inhibitors: why a cue that predicts âyou wonât get itâ carries its own emotional valence, how it affects performance, and why timing and information are criticalâespecially for highly motivated dogs and discrimination-heavy sports like Agility.Finally, you explore the practical question: Can you train purely âpositive-onlyâ? Stewart frames it around goals, dog type, time pressure, trainer skill, and contextâlanding on a pragmatic takeaway: fewer tribes, more good mechanics and responsibility.đ Your turn: How do you handle errorsâprevent them, accept them, or use them strategically? And where do omission cues show up in your training?Chapters00:00 Introduction and context of the discussion03:38 Positive training methods and the criticism of them06:31 Nuance in dog training and the role of errors09:38 Errorless learning and why it matters12:53 Resilience in dog training15:47 Challenges in training and why they matter18:39 The role of signals in dog training21:46 Psychological processes in training24:59 Pavlovian inhibition and emotional valence27:13 Challenges in dog training and constructive learning30:22 Agility and how dogs cope with errors34:24 Frustration theory and resilience in dog training38:42 Positive and negative reinforcement in dog training42:32 Limits and possibilities in dog trainingFind Stewart and Kynologyđ https://kynology.org/đ https://youtube.com/@Kynology?si=JRbwg7nzggmC4KDzđ https://www.facebook.com/stewart.hilliard.33đ https://www.instagram.com/kkynology/More about Kynotecđ https://www.kynotec.atđ https://www.facebook.com/kynotecđ https://www.instagram.com/kynotec/channel/đ https://www.linkedin.com/company/kynotec/âââââââââââââ If you have any comments about our podcast, please send us an email at [email protected] or contact us on Facebook or Instagram.Weâd love it if you subscribed to the show â and even better, if you shared the podcast with your friends and colleagues.Please leave us feedback and a rating in the app youâre using.Thank you! đ#Kynotalk #Kynotec #DogTrainingPodcast #Hundetrainer #AgilityDog #MarkerTraining #ClickerTraining #BehaviorScience #CanineBehavior #FrustrationTolerance #ErrorlessLearning #StimulusControl #trainingtips
By Florian Schneider4.7
33 ratings
đïž Kynotalk #117: Dr. Stewart Hilliard returns for a short, focused episode sparked by a thoughtful YouTube commentâchallenging a common narrative in dog training: âpositive-only,â errors in training, and whether sport/Agility dogs are truly trained without pressure.Stewart adds nuance: what errorless learning actually means, where the concept comes from (Skinner and colleagues), and why âerrorsâ are often an artifact of imperfect teaching procedures rather than an unavoidable part of learning. At the same time, he explains why building resilienceâand teaching dogs to work through frustration/adversityâstill matters, not just in sport, but in everyday life and high-demand working contexts.A key segment dives into omission cues / Pavlovian inhibitors: why a cue that predicts âyou wonât get itâ carries its own emotional valence, how it affects performance, and why timing and information are criticalâespecially for highly motivated dogs and discrimination-heavy sports like Agility.Finally, you explore the practical question: Can you train purely âpositive-onlyâ? Stewart frames it around goals, dog type, time pressure, trainer skill, and contextâlanding on a pragmatic takeaway: fewer tribes, more good mechanics and responsibility.đ Your turn: How do you handle errorsâprevent them, accept them, or use them strategically? And where do omission cues show up in your training?Chapters00:00 Introduction and context of the discussion03:38 Positive training methods and the criticism of them06:31 Nuance in dog training and the role of errors09:38 Errorless learning and why it matters12:53 Resilience in dog training15:47 Challenges in training and why they matter18:39 The role of signals in dog training21:46 Psychological processes in training24:59 Pavlovian inhibition and emotional valence27:13 Challenges in dog training and constructive learning30:22 Agility and how dogs cope with errors34:24 Frustration theory and resilience in dog training38:42 Positive and negative reinforcement in dog training42:32 Limits and possibilities in dog trainingFind Stewart and Kynologyđ https://kynology.org/đ https://youtube.com/@Kynology?si=JRbwg7nzggmC4KDzđ https://www.facebook.com/stewart.hilliard.33đ https://www.instagram.com/kkynology/More about Kynotecđ https://www.kynotec.atđ https://www.facebook.com/kynotecđ https://www.instagram.com/kynotec/channel/đ https://www.linkedin.com/company/kynotec/âââââââââââââ If you have any comments about our podcast, please send us an email at [email protected] or contact us on Facebook or Instagram.Weâd love it if you subscribed to the show â and even better, if you shared the podcast with your friends and colleagues.Please leave us feedback and a rating in the app youâre using.Thank you! đ#Kynotalk #Kynotec #DogTrainingPodcast #Hundetrainer #AgilityDog #MarkerTraining #ClickerTraining #BehaviorScience #CanineBehavior #FrustrationTolerance #ErrorlessLearning #StimulusControl #trainingtips

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