4.7 Review

Working Dog Training for the Twenty-First Century

Journal

FRONTIERS IN VETERINARY SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2021.646022

Keywords

training; conditioning; detection dogs; assistance dogs; behavior; learning; working dogs

Funding

  1. Wallis Annenberg PetSpace Leadership Institute initiative
  2. Wallis Annenberg PetSpace

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Dogs are trained for various working roles, with training practices passed down from trainer to trainer. Advances in psychology have improved our understanding of animal behavior, but have had limited impact on working dog training. The aim is to combine advancements from scientists and practitioners for better, more targeted research for working dogs.
Dogs are trained for a variety of working roles including assistance, protection, and detection work. Many canine working roles, in their modern iterations, were developed at the turn of the 20th century and training practices have since largely been passed down from trainer to trainer. In parallel, research in psychology has advanced our understanding of animal behavior, and specifically canine learning and cognition, over the last 20 years; however, this field has had little focus or practical impact on working dog training. The aims of this narrative review are to (1) orient the reader to key advances in animal behavior that we view as having important implications for working dog training, (2) highlight where such information is already implemented, and (3) indicate areas for future collaborative research bridging the gap between research and practice. Through a selective review of research on canine learning and behavior and training of working dogs, we hope to combine advances from scientists and practitioners to lead to better, more targeted, and functional research for working dogs.

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