Understanding Non-Verbal Thinking
We all wonder now and then what our dog is thinking. If
we wonder aloud, perhaps when mealtime is approaching and the dog is looking
expectantly at us, we might say something like, "I'll bet Tippy's thinking,
'When is my dinner going to be ready?' " In all likelihood, Tippy isn't
originating any thoughts about 'when dinner will be ready.' It is more likely
Tippy is imagining (or 'imaging' in his mind) the words and movements you
usually say and perform before getting his dinner; something like, "You want
dinner, Tippy?" All that tail wagging and those pleading eyes are aimed at
stimulating you to say it.
But, an inability to originate thoughts in a spoken
language does not make dogs unintelligent. Even people don't actively think in a
spoken language unless they actively 'speak' it. For instance, during a short
vacation to Japan, if you don't already speak the language, you'll probably pick
up the meaning of a few words. After a few natives look at you in the morning
and say "Ohio," you may eventually learn that they're not curious about where
you're from, but are wishing you a "Good Morning." Still, you won't think in
Japanese unless you live there a few months and actively speak it. Even a pet
Akita will never learn to speak or think in the native lingo because their voice
boxes, tongues and lips cannot formulate the sounds of Japanese... or English,
or French, etc, etc. The limit of our dog's language-learning is the meaning of
the sounds of certain words. Luckily, dogs are quick to learn the sounds that
are important to them.
With this in mind, when Tippy is prodding us about
serving dinner, we'd be wise to discard ideas about complete sentences being
originated and thought about, and replace them with the non-language concept of
mental images. To illustrate this further; when most Tippys are asking for
dinner they actually look from their owners toward the place where it is served,
generally the kitchen.
Evidence of Imagery
Some very convincing research suggests that dogs think in
sensory impressions; visual, sound and odor images, etc. This is not to say that
they sit around on quiet days experiencing videos inside their brains. However,
they likely share our ability to form and experience in their minds certain
images, odors and sounds. The scientific basis for this idea came from Russia
and was published in the US in 1973. A scientist named VS. Rusinov 1 was
studying the electrophysiology of the brain and had several dogs wired with
brain wave equipment and radio transmitters. When the dogs were brought into the
lab from the kennels for experimental conditioning tests, the
electroencephalograph machine was turned on to record their brain wave patterns.
This was done at the same time each day, five days a week. One weekend, purely
by accident, Rusinov brought a group of visitors into the lab and turned on the
EEG machine. Lo, the dog that was normally schedule for tests during the week at
that time was sending wave forms nearly identical to his regular working
patterns! When the testing time passed, the dogs' brain waves soon returned to
their normal 'at rest' forms. I never found any mention by Rusinov as to whether
the dogs out in the kennel were actually performing their conditioned laboratory
behaviorisms. Chances are they were not, but one thing is almost sure; compared
to human experience in similar types of studies, the dogs were apparently
experiencing them mentally2,3.
The late Polish scientist, Jerzi Konorski,3 taught dogs
to salivate and expect food in their trays when a light flickered. This was done
regularly every few minutes. However, after a few trials, the dogs started
salivating and looking at the trays as if the food were actually there, even
though the light had not flickered. Konorski ventured that the dogs were
hallucinating about both the stimulus (the light) and the reward for salivating
(the food). One thing is sure: Something was going on in the dogs' minds that
made them behave as if they were happening.
Some Human Examples
Before going on with dogs, let us consider some facets of
our own 'mind's eye,' as suggested by Konorski. Imagine we have a date to meet a
loved one at a busy restaurant. We get there on time and sit at a table near the
door. Fifteen minutes go by, but no friend arrives. We begin to wonder if they
are coming at all. We start watching people approach the door. Pretty soon,
people with similar features almost cause us to call out to them. The more
concerned and anxious we become, the more apt we are to mistake strangers for
our friend. When he or she finally arrives, the pleasure and relief we feel is
often mixed with mild displeasure. We are ambivalent ... we have mixed emotions
about meeting them in the future.
Almost everyone has mental imagery. Often, just the
thought of a loved one conjures up their image. This can apply to sounds, as
well. Think about your favorite musical piece and your can often hear it in your
'mind's ear.'
These are positive images. They are emotionally pleasant.
At the other end of the scale, recalling a terrifying experience can not only
create its images, but sometime even make us shudder. This is an example of
negative, emotionally unpleasant images.
Back To Dogs
So it is with our dogs. When we are late getting home, or
if they over-miss us because we spoil them with attention and petting every time
they demand it, they very likely worry in images, too. They may well recall
images of us and our activities, such as fluffing the pillows on the sofa,
putting away record albums, handling magazines and books, putting on shoes just
before leaving, sitting in a favorite armchair, etc. As a result of this, they
often engage in activities which involve them with these images: Pillows wind up
on the floor, albums or magazines are moved or chewed, a chair seat gets dug up,
shoes are brought out of the closet. >
Transfer interrupted!
to
interact with things that symbolize us.
If dogs really do store up and recall images of us and
life's other objects and experiences, it follows that we might use this to our
mutual benefit. But since most owners do not understand how dogs think, this
imagery is where the seeds of most behavior problems are sown. Dogs receive and
recall conflicting images of owners and many important experiences.
The Puppy's Dilemma
Consider the new puppy whose owners come home at regular
times and join in an ecstatically joyful greeting ceremony. This imagery is
quickly ingrained, and the pup begins to anticipate the experience, just
Konorski's dogs hallucinated about the flickering light and the food tray.
However, as will happen in even the most well regulated household, one day the
owner is late. The puppy begins experiencing the images of his tardy owners
...starts fretting, pacing. Well primed energies, ready for the greeting
ceremony, demand an outlet as the adrenaline starts pumping.
What's going on in its mind's eye or ear? It probably
imagines hearing footsteps, perhaps even sees the door open... which doesn't
happen. But it should. This introduces conflict between what it wants and
expects and what is really happening. Conflict creates frustration. Frustration
produces anxiety, which triggers an even greater adrenaline rush. The pup
searches for something real to satisfy its desire to 'experience' the owner ...
a magazine or book it saw the owner reading recently. It is rich with the
owner's scent. If it cannot have the owner there, it can at least have their
genuine odor or taste. So it sniffs, tastes, maybe even swallows parts of the
article. Naturally, this does not fully substitute for the whole owner, so the
puppy's social appetite is not really satisfied.
Finally, here comes the owner. The puppy innocently
launches into its joyous, semi-hysterical ritual. The owner starts to join in,
but spies the pulverized magazine or book. What's this? Naturally, if not
wisely, the owner angrily grabs the pup, drags it to the demolished object and
scolds it, or slaps it's snout or rump, or both. The pet's single-track mind is
riveted on the owner. It yips, rolls over, or struggles vainly to escape.
Punishment concluded, the owner angrily picks up the remnants of the article and
storms to the trash basket.
Psychic Trauma
The net result of this is a totally confused pup with a
conflicting set of images of its owner. This sort of shock to the nervous system
is called psychic trauma in both animals and humans. A conflict has been
instilled between the positive image of the owner (happy Dr. Jekyll) and the
negative (Mr. Homecoming Hyde). This creates frustration and anxiety about
homecomings, growing in severity if the scenario is repeated a few times. (It is
interesting that in many cases, owners tell us that the pup was fine for a day
or so after the first punishment. This may equate to the human experience of
repression, in which memory of the traumatic experience is suppressed, creating
a sort of 'backwards amnesia.') Even when this occurs, since the punishment was
not associated with the act of chewing up something, the puppy seeks out another
article, perhaps a shoe, and the cycle is repeated until the total relationship
between owner and dog is tainted with emotional ambivalence. Mixed feelings are
eating away at the positive qualities of their relationship. Negative emotional
impressions may start to dominate it.
At about this stage, many owners conclude that the
punishment may not have been severe enough. That's why the correction was not
permanent. So they intensify it. The relationship erodes further as weeks go by.
Enough of this cascading negative effect and the owner is ready to take drastic
action. The dog, now hyper-sensitive to its owner's mood change, feels something
is wrong. This often is reflected by new problems, such as submissive wetting
when the owner comes home or approaches the dog at other times; off-schedule
bowel movements or urination occur, etc.
Many pets act insecure, currying more favor when the
owner is home, and hence, missing the owner even more acutely when left alone.
Frustration and anxiety build, while the isolation-related, tension-relieving
behavior mounts. The unwitting owner, who originally may have thought the dog is
'getting even' for being left alone, begins to consider it incorrigible.
HELP!
This is when outside help is often sought. A book is
purchased. The veterinarian, breeder, pet shop, a trainer or behaviorist may be
consulted. If lucky, the owner gets advice that brings genuine insight into
pet/owner relationships and dog behavior. But, more likely, they find
traditional quick fixes and the dog winds up in a desensitization program; gets
dosed with anxiety relieving drugs or barbiturates; is stuck in a cramped crate
or cage all day, or banned to the yard or garage, or has its mouth stuffed with
chewed debris and taped shut for hours. Since none of these approaches deal with
the causes, the 'thinking dog' and the total relationship with its owners and
the environment, success is rare. The majority of these formerly precious pets
find themselves rejected ... relegated to the local pound for five to seven
days, where the odds are 3-to-2 they'll suffer society's 'ultimate solution'.
But things don't have to be so grim, if the owners learn some 'dog
think.'
Applying Positive Imagery To Solve 'Separation
Anxiety'
Dogs that misbehave when they are left alone are said to
be suffering from separation anxiety. The term is a neat buzz-phrase; almost
everybody uses it. It sounds professional. The trouble is, as a transplant from
human psychiatry, it really doesn't convey much useful information. However, the
term is here, so we'll use it in its broadest sense, which is; "a troubled
feeling when left alone or apart from a certain person or persons." This allows
us to recommend a remedial behavioral program that deals with the realities of
the dog's total relationships. First, however, we must be sure that the dog's
veterinarian has ruled out the many physical/medical causes for anxiety, such as
thyrotoxicosis, hyperthyroidism, pre-diabetes, encephalitis, allergies,
hyperkinesis, etc. etc.
The Program
Dogs that are unduly upset when left alone usually enjoy
their owner's attention and petting whenever they ask for (or demand it) when
the people are at home. To apply the imagery concept to this relationship, we
could say the dog 'sees itself' as directing, or leading the owner. When it
wants some petting, it nudges or otherwise stimulates the owner, and the owner
complies. The dog wants out, whines at the door or at the owner, and the door
gets opened. Mealtime approaches, dog whines and prances, and dinner gets
served. When the owner goes from room to room, the dog is either ahead, leading
them, or close behind. This is the reality of their relationship, at least in
the dog's mind. But, when the owner leaves, against the dog's wishes, the pet is
predictably upset, and problem behavior occurs. This can involve barking,
chewing, pacing, self-mutilation, off-schedule bowel movements, urination around
the house, etc.
The leadership problem can be turned about by presenting
a different reality to the dog; one in which the dog is pleasantly, but firmly
and consistently told to perform some simple act, such as 'sit' whenever it
attempts to gain attention or affection, or whenever the owner wants to give the
dog some attention. All 'sits', or whatever command is used ('down' is a good
one for highly bossy dogs) are praised happily as 3 to 5 seconds of petting is
awarded; then the dog is cheerfully released with an "OK" or "Free." (Free is a
good release because OK is too common a word.)
If a really bossy dog refuses to obey, and many do when
they realize their relationship is being turned around, simply ignore the
situation, turn away and go on about some other activity, ignoring the dog. Some
dogs have refused to respond for as long as four days before coming to terms
with a follower relationship. However long it takes, after a few days the dog's
image of itself seems to evolve from one of giving direction to taking it with
compliance prior to being petted, getting dinner, going out the door, getting on
the couch, etc.
In moving around the house, whenever the dog forges
ahead, simply about-turn and go the other way. This must be repeated until the
dog walks patiently behind or, better yet, doesn't even follow. It is also
helpful, but not vital, to practice down-stays of increasing length during
several evenings a week.
Images of Hyper-Emotionality
Most 'home alone' problem dogs get extremely emotional
when their owners get home; some even get excitable when regular departure times
approach. To supplant these emotionally over-stimulating images, sit quietly for
about five minutes before leaving, in the area where the dog will be left. No
eye contact or speaking is allowed. Then, get up and go without looking at or
speaking to the pet.
At homecoming, enter quietly and ignore the dog until it
quiets down completely. Then it is greeted happily, but briefly, away from the
door of arrival. This subdued routine soon replaces the dog's highly emotional
mental images of returns and departures with calmness and serenity.
Here's the tough part for most all dog owners: When
coming home the place is a mess! Pillows have been chewed, or the chair is
tattered again, or a pile of poop graces the doorway, or some other problem is
evident. If we keep in mind that the dog has in the past suffered from
conflicting images at homecoming, it is imperative that no emotion, or even
attention, should be directed at the remnants of the problem; such as chewed up
magazines, shoes, defecation, etc. Instead, after five minutes of ignoring the
dog, it should be greeted away from the scene of the misbehavior, and then
pleasantly taken outdoors or to another room and left alone while the mess is
cleaned up. This avoids creating new (or reinforcing old) conflicting images of
emotional reactions to, or interactions with, the debris, defecation,
etc.
I have always called this 'the secret clean-up'. It has
worked wonders as part of programs ranging from digging in the yard to
housetraining puppies. Just why it is such an effective adjunct to correction
programs remains to be satisfactorily explained. In the meantime, we'll have to
say that the lack of an image of the owner and the mess is more beneficial to
correction than is the image.
The Big Picture
So, there it is. Dogs think in images and we can mold and
change their behavior in hundreds of ways if we will think as they do. For
instance, on the negative side, a set up whereby a car screeches to a stop, horn
blaring, just as a dog starts toward the street from the sidewalk, then praising
its retreat, is a valuable exercise in negative imagery. However, it must be
repeated until the dog avoids the street when cars are not present, as
well.
Teaching the 'panic' command to come needs the dog's name
followed by a code word, a sound image that is exclusive to coming when it is
absolutely necessary, and praise words or a vocal rhythm that is unique to that
command, coupled with fast hand-clapping while taking a crouched position. These
combined, positive images can create a dog that will dependably respond to your
code word and come to your praise. It is especially important to teach this
command when the dog is out of sight, as well as in darkness. OK, you say, why
bother to crouch to clap and praise in the dark, or when the dog can't see you?
The answer to that lies in the dog's exquisite, finely tuned and interrelated
aural/visual senses, as well as just how intelligent our dogs are. But that's
another story for another issue.
In the meantime, keep positive images of yourself and the
future and you will convey confidence and cheer to your dog and all whom you
meet.
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Email: mailto:jyetara@jyetara.com
References:
1. V.S. Rusinov: Electrophysiology of the Central
Nervous System, Consultants Bureau, New York, 1973.
2. Delgado, J.M.R., MD: Physical Control of the
Mind, Harper and Row, New York, 1969.
3. J. Konorski: Integrative Activity of the Brain,
University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1967.
http://www.webtrail.com/petbehavior/
Behavior Problems in Dogs, 3rd ed. 1999, and the
New Better Behavior in Dogs, 1999, available from Direct Books,
1-800-776-2665.
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