by mborsum on Sat Jan 26, 2013 3:57 am
Hi folks,
I'm new here, I usually just check out the morning's puppy photo and "awwww" at my computer.
I'm a professional dog trainer in Michigan, and have been training people and their dogs with Positive Reinforcement for about 4 years.
As far as Calming signals go, mostly, they seem to be only effective between dogs. I talked to Steve White from I2Ik9, who was on the CCPDT council, at the Michigan Partners for Animal Welfare conference in '10.
I asked him specifically about Calming signals, as I had read about them in Brenda Aaloff's "Aggression in Dogs".
He said "There isn't any evidence that calming signals actually work between humans and dogs".
It makes sense. Remember that dogs are better at reading human body language than any other animal.
Canine Calming Signals are not normal human body language. We do not naturally lick our lips, or yawn when we are attempting to soothe any situation. Your dog knows this. Humans get very still, and use a soothing deep voice, and we act gentle. We stroke our pets, talk to them. "it's ok, good boy..." etc.
Using body language for canines would make about as much sense to your dog as imitating a cat. Or, imagine someone attempting to speak to you, using very bad english, and horrible syntax. Chances are, you wouldn't understand.
At least, not without conditioning the animal to understand what you mean by using them. It would make as much sense to teach a dog that by licking your lips and yawning, that you mean the same things he does when he does it, as it would to simply teach a dog to relax and go lie down quietly , with a hand signal.
When I used to work in a shelter, I would occasionally try to use these signals with new arrivals that may be scared and nervous. Sometimes, I would like to think I saw some response from one of the dogs, or maybe saw them relax a little, but I could never be certain. Perhaps, telling a dog "hey it's ok, don't be scared" in a shelter was pointless anyway.
Anyways, remember that as far as humans using calming signals, there still seems to be a lot of debate when it comes to whether its effective on dogs.
Thanks!