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Trying to tell people that your word is the only word that’s allowed on the subject, or the final word, doesn’t really work in a discussion forum.I will not be debating training or be discussing different training techniques.
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MyPTSD's personality ranges widely within a candid, empathetic, challenging, yet supportive membership. Diversity is the spice of life, and this community respects diverse opinions. A community philosophy often read here is "use what helps you, and ignore the rest."
Assuming Winnie is eating adequately and has no health issues going on...Any suggestions, thoughts or feedback is welcomed!
Winnie is either picking up a a change in my anxiety/stress or something else in me which causes her to stress and in so doing causes her to whine.
You’ve mentioned this a couple of times and I’m genuinely interested. We train seizure alert and seizure response dogs, and as long as the alerting behaviours haven’t already been trained out of the dog (something a lot of pet owners do because alerting behaviours are often interpreted by the handler as “My dog is annoying me or misbehaving”), we find that most healthy dogs are able to detect the incredibly subtle physiological changes that precede a seizure. So we have a lot of success with that.Only a small percent of dogs can naturally detect seizures and that detection cannot be trained but rather is what a few dogs can naturally do.
other than anecdotally
Not at all, I’m just digging my nose into the research because of the NDIS funding stuff going on here with assistance dogs atm and we need all the research we can get.Though appologize if I gave incorrect information based on cutting edge research.
Certainly we get excellent results for trainer-trained seizure dogs, for a variety of breeds. But the studies suggest that’s because there are subtle physiological changes that precede many seizure episodes and it’s those that the dog is detecting rather than the sudden neurological change.