Fluency of Cues vs. Fluency of Behaviors
I think there is! We put a lot of focus on having fluent behaviors when the most common reason a dog doesn't respond is due to a lack of understanding or fluency in the verbal cue.
How are fluent cues different from fluent behaviors? To determine whether the behavior or the verbal cue is lacking in fluency you can ask these questions:
- Is the behavior reliable when prompted with an obvious hand cue or context cue?
- Is the prompted behavior reliable in a variety of locations or contexts?
- Does the dog offer the completed behavior?
- When the verbal cue is used does the behavior deteriorate or become unreliable?
If you answered yes to these questions, then it could be that the behavior is likely fluent, but the verbal cue is not.
Testing the Fluency of You Cues with a "Cue Fluency Check"
You can test the fluency of your verbal cues by doing a "cue fluency check". It is basically a cue discrimination exercise. In the below video, I give Kashi a series of verbal cues. Her responses tell me which cues are fluent and which she still struggles to understand fully. Her percentage of correct responses here is about 83%. And it showed me that at least one of the cues was not yet fluent.
Give it a try! Choose at least 3-5 behaviors that you feel both the behavior and the cues are fluent. They can be simple behaviors such as sit or down. While my goal is to have behaviors on verbal cue, using hand cues for the exercise is fine. Stay consistent though. If you use a hand cue with a specific behavior, then don't switch to verbal during the exercise. Remember these are behaviors you have already added a cue to and feel confident that both the behavior and the cue are fluent. The check is meant to give you information, not train a behavior or a cue.
You can set a timer for 30 sec or a minute depending on how many behaviors you have. Or you can determine a certain number of total reps – 10 is an easy one to figure out percentages.
Give your cues randomly. C/T each correct response. View your video and determine the fluence of your cues. Which need work? Which appear fluent? What is your percentage of correct responses? And most important, how will you clearly communicate to your dog the meaning of your cues to build fluency.
If you find there is latency in your dogs' response or your dog responds with an incorrect behavior, break it out. Go back to your protocol of "new cue followed by known cue" to build more value and understanding in your final cue before adding it back in to your cue fluency check exercise.
When providing cues, keep in mind that if the behavior starts to deteriorate, it might just not be the behavior that needs work.
Julie Flanery, CPDT-KA has been working professionally with dogs and their handlers since 1993. She focuses on the needs of the dog and helping people form a strong relationship, through clear communication, and positive reinforcement.
She has placed Obedience, Freestyle, Rally, Rally-FrEe, Agility, Trick Dog and Parkour titles on her dogs and has earned Championships in Freestyle, Heelwork-to-Music and a Grand Championship MCL in Rally-FrEe. She has achieved both High Technical Merit and High Artistic Merit in both Freestyle and Heelwork to Music several times over, including three prestigious Attila Challenge awards, as well as several “Top H.A.T.” awards for High Scoring Heelwork, Attention and Teamwork. In 2001 she was named "Trainer of the Year" by the World Canine Freestyle Organization and has been a competition freestyle judge since 2003.
In 2012, Julie developed the sport of Rally-FrEe to help freestylers increase the quality and precision of their performances. It has since become a stand-alone sport enjoyed by dog sport enthusiasts all over the world. Julie has been a workshop and seminar presenter both nationally and internationally. She currently trains and competes with her Tibetan terrier in both Musical Freestyle and Rally-FrEe.
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