Archives for March 2008

SimDog: New Virtual Project to Help Pet Acupuncture Students

This morning I got a notice about a virtual/simulated canine prototype under development called SimDog.

Colorado State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences lays claim to the only simulated canine with a virtual reality interface.

The idea is to help acupuncture students learn correct procedures and the correct locations for pet acupuncture on a pooch. The mindset behind it is that it eases the learning process for the students because the SimDog “cooperates” instead of squirms.

I previously wrote about pet acupuncturist careers in my Unusual Animal Career series. So, my thoughts?

First off, the thing is super expensive–but perhaps useful in the early stages of pet acupuncture training and it looks like it is specifically for pet acupuncture (and eventually other animal career) training programs.

However, dealing with uncooperative or squirming animals is going to be something these students encounter as professionals–so I anticipate that more experienced students will transfer what they learn to live animals during practical hands-on experience further in their pet acupuncture studies.

Next, what about cats, horses, and other companion animals that might be clients? Perhaps the company has those virtual/simulated pets on the planning board…

Now, there has been a large trend toward virtual learning. In fact, I participate in some online programs because it is easy and convenient. But when it comes to animals, you have to also get practical hands-on experience.

When I entered the animal field, people wanted practical experience over academic training, then the pendulum swing moved the emphasis to academic training which catalyzed programs that didn’t exist when I entered the field.

Ideally, both hands-on and academic training go together. If I had a choice, I look for aptitude first because you can’t always teach that. You can always teach the academics but not always the nuances or savvy.

I recently explained to a student, “Anyone can train but not everyone has the talent to train.” If you don’t understand this…more later.

Anyway, in the animal training field Sniffy the Virtual Rat Pro, Version 2.0 (with CD-ROM)helped to teach people the basics of training techniques. However it is vastly different from real, live application.

I’ll be interested in seeing how SimDog evolves–right now it is only a head–and I’ll be watching what impact it has on the learning process for pet acupuncture students.

Finally, if you are an animal training enthusiast, check out Sniffy the Virtual Rat Pro, Version 2.0 (with CD-ROM)and then compare it to the real process with live animals.

Karen Pryor’s Reaching the Animal Mind

Last year I contacted Karen Pryor asking for an interview about her online training program. She wrote back saying she couldn’t since she was swamped with work on a new book–which is due out in September and titled, Reaching the Animal Mind: The Clicker Training Method and What It Teaches Us About All Animals

I first chatted with Karen just after her now infamous, Don’t Shoot the Dog!: The New Art of Teaching and Training was released. The concepts presented were not new to me or my colleagues in the zoo and exotic animal training world but they hit a cord in the dog training world big time.

Soon, the methods moved into the popular culture’s cats, horses, llamas, pet birds, and other companion animals and livestock as Karen toured with Gary Wilkes–spreading the word and creating business empires for them both.

Today the popular term for those techniques is known simply as “clicker training.”

Before clickers were widely manufactured most marine animal and many wild animal trainers used battery operated biker buzzers, got our hands on the party crocodile noise makers, brass frogs and other clickers from the Far East. They were like gold bullions.

Today you can purchase clickers that allow you to adjust the noise of the clicker and select from a wide variety of colors, styles, and manufacturers.

Perhaps I should put my older clickers in a shrine and start a clicker museum…

Anyway, changes in animal training methods are difficult to get some people to accept. If it worked a long time ago–why change it?

I hate that mindset.

When I tested the early head control devices and the citronella collars here in the USA in the early 1990s people argued with me, scowled at me, yelled at me–because they did not understand the devices nor did they want to change.

Funny enough, I still encounter that resistance but it is easier to sway them. In fact, one of my neighbors saw how the use of the head control device made managing my other neighbor’s dog a breeze–and gleefully presented the idea to his wife.

She scowled and resisted. During a social evening he wanted me to present the case for using it on his dog to her–and I declined. Instead, I put up a video for them to watch on my local blog.

It always amazes me that some people will argue with a professional when they have asked for a professional opinion. I am SO over that which is why I declined to comment during my down time. I could she her resistance in her scowl…

Funny thing is, these people are highly educated, well traveled, and love their dog. So why would she show resistance over a device that doesn’t work for them and inflicts pain on their pet?

Beats me.

Anyway, below are a few of Karen’s books. Advance order her new one and if you haven’t read the others I can recommend them as easily absorbed, facinating works.