Category: Calm Assertive Energy

Feb 25 2010

Cesar Milan and The Principle of Parsimony

Anytime that we try to explain the behavior of any animal that cannot (or will not in the case of humans) communicate in human language, we are practicing the art of conjecture. For example, the simple act of a dog drinking water might be explained by any (or many) of the following statements:

  • The dog is simply thirsty.
  • The dog has a bad taste in its’ mouth.
  • The dog is nervous and this behavior helps to calm it.
  • The dog bit its’ tongue and the water helps sooth it.
  • The dog is hot.
  • Another dog just drank some water and so this dog has to have some too.
  • There is a fly doing the backstroke in the water bowl and the dog is trying to get the fly.

If I wanted to get really specific I am sure I could come up with at least a dozen others, but I think you get my point. With so many possible explanations available to us, how do we come up with the best one for a dog’s behavior?

If we know things like the circumstances that surround a certain behavior, the history of the dog displaying the behavior, and the health of the dog displaying the behavior, then we are able to take an educated guess and put into practice the principle of parsimony.  In simple terms, parsimony means that all things being equal, the simplest explanation tends to be correct. In my drinking dog example, if we know that the dog was just in the backyard chasing a rabbit round and round the yard, we could reasonably assume that the dog is drinking water because it’s hot and thirsty.

This brings me to one of my biggest bones of contention with Cesar Milan, The Dog Whisperer.  To me, many of his theories and explanations for dog behavior seem totally out of sync with parsimony. For instance the following tweet was posted via his twitter account the other day:

"Animals sense vibrations of energy, but smell is their next strongest sense. In dogs, both of these senses are deeply connected."

Rabbit in HatWhat does he mean by this? Does he mean that dogs are like sharks and have specialized cells (ampullae of Lorenzini) that allow them to detect electrical signals? Simple anatomy tells us that is not the case. Does he mean that our emotions produce energy waves that are not only detectable by dogs– but are discernable as to whether they are good or bad as they relate to the dog? If this is the case then wouldn’t some simple experiments be able to prove this? Where are these experiments and why aren’t they being undertaken by Mr. Milan & others who believe in his theories? The most parsimonious explanation is that he is flat wrong.

We know that dogs are keen observers of body language because without our formal language skills, they have to communicate visually. And like us, dogs use their sense of hearing as a predictor of intention.  And although we both use smell as a means of communication, we know that a dog can detect smells at levels that are lost on us, but are of vital importance to them.

So when you put all of these things together what is more parsimonious, that dogs have a sixth sense about our emotional energy that is directly detectable as good and bad, or that dogs use their heightened senses of sight, smell, and sound as predictors of our emotional state?

On his show The Dog Whisperer, Cesar will often explain a dog’s behavior as being dominant, that the dog is trying to assert its’ authority over that of its’ owner. Even if I bought into his theory that dogs will become dominant if not dominated (which I don’t), there's still the problem of parsimony.

Many people watch his show and then automatically assume that any behavior that a dog displays that is in contrast to the desire of the owner is an attempt to be dominant. But where is parsimony in this? Let’s try another example. Suppose you have a dog that refuses to go up the stairs, what could be some possible explanations for this?

  • The dog is being dominant.
  • The dog is afraid of the stairs.
  • Something happened on the stairs that scared the dog.
  • Something happened at the top of the stairs that scared the dog.
  • Most of time the dog is taken upstairs he is locked into a room so he is out the way of company.
  • The dog has an underlying medical problem that makes it uncomfortable or painful to go up the stairs.
  • Nothing good ever happens upstairs.
  • Everything good is downstairs.

There are many people who are fans & followers of Cesar that may conclude that the dog is displaying dominance, without first considering any of the other possible (and much more probable) explanations.

I have spoken with many people that firmly believe in Cesar and his methods and incredibly when I ask them why they choose to believe Cesar’s way over more parsimonious explanations, they often answer “common sense”. They see the idea of a dog trying to be dominant over all of its’ environment as being more parsimonious than the idea that the dog is afraid of the stairs.

Sometime later this year Cesar is scheduled to be part of a national symposium on dog training sponsored by The American Humane Association. While the details of his participation have not been publically revealed yet, it is my fervent hope that he will debate his peers in an open forum. I would really like to know why his explanations for dog behavior should be chosen above those that are more in line with parsimony.

As always, we welcome comments from both sides of the issue.

Cheers

Kevin, Jackie, Gavin, Annie, Tosha

12 comments - Posted by Kevin Myers at 4:46 PM - Categories: Cesar Millan | Calm Assertive Energy | The Dog Whisperer | Anti Cesar Milan | Training | Behavior

Jan 29 2010

Does the Milgram Experiment Explain Cesar Millan’s Influence?

Blue Eyed WolfI’ve made several posts lately of my concerns about Cesar Millan and his show The Dog Whisperer. Every time I sit down to write a new post, I pledge to get down off of the Anti-Cesar soapbox and move on to other things.  But it seems like every day I see or hear something that brings me back to this subject.

Yesterday morning I saw a link that Pat Miller posted on her Facebook page about a company that was advertising a prong collar called Secret Powers. A collar that hid the fact it was a prong collar so that, and I’m quoting here, “When you are going down the street with your well behaved Dog, no one knows your Secret Powers.”

My response to this was the same as many who commented, if you feel that it’s something that you need to hide, maybe you shouldn’t be using it!

Intuition, your inner voice, sneaking suspicion, spider sense, whatever you want to call it, not paying attention to it may lead to another noun, regret.

I’m sure that there are many of you, who like me, have done things in the past even though something inside you felt it wasn’t quite right. There can be many reasons for this; expediency, curiosity, conformity, and perhaps the most important one for the topic of this article, our willingness to follow the advice of an expert even if that advice runs contrary to our own conscience.

In a famous 1961 experiment, Yale psychologist Stanley Milgram devised a study to measure the willingness of participants to obey an authority figure who told them to do something that went against their conscience. Simply stated, The Milgram Experiment undertook to determine if one human would administer shocks of increasingly higher voltages to another human while being told by an expert that it was okay and even necessary to do so. A full description of the experiment and its’ results can be found at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milgram_experiment. It is well worth reading.

This experiment has been reproduced and modified somewhat in the years since 1961 but virtually each trial produces the same results, around 60% - 65% of the participants actually pushed the button that was supposed to deliver the maximum 450-volt shock to the student!

This brings me to the point of this article: Why do some people follow the advice given by Cesar Milan on The Dog Whisperer even though they may have reservations about the methods he uses?

The marketing and PR machine that is in place to support Cesar Millan is nothing short of impressive. Consider the following:

  • Cesar’s show The Dog Whisperer runs on The National Geographic Channel, an organization long known to be animal friendly.
  • Cesar has appeared on talk shows like Oprah & The Tonight Show.
  • Cesar’s clients include many famous people.
  • During the President Obama “dog watch” Cesar could be found on just about every news channel on TV offering advice to the President.
  • Many of the catch phrases that Cesar uses like “Calm Assertive Pack Leader”, “Dominant Aggressive”, “Dogs Sense Energy”, and others, are finding their way into the common vernacular, often without true understanding of just what these terms mean.
  • Even though the methods he uses often seem to be overly punitive and sometimes even cruel to some, Cesar constantly assures his viewers that they are harmless to the dogs.
  • Cesar’s admonitions that if we don’t come to dominate our dog, our dog will come to dominate us.

It is very easy to see how people that are not exposed to any other training or behavioral information about dogs would come to trust Cesar, even though they may not feel right about some of his methods.

If you are a follower of Cesar Millan, I would ask you to please read the AVSAB Position Statement on the Use of Dominance Theory in Behavior Modification of Animals. Pay particular attention to pages three and four as they address many of the methods and myths propagated by Cesar and his show. I also encourage you to visit the website Beyond Cesar Millan, this website if full of information authored by qualified professionals as to the validity of the methods used by Cesar.  You can also find a list of positive training resources on our training page.

I hope that by exposing you to this information you will be more willing to listen to your inner voice when it comes to using methods on your dogs that just don’t quite feel right to you.

For those of you that are already on the positive training bandwagon, share you knowledge with someone who just may not know about the wonderful world of training and friendship that lies beyond Cesar Millan.

As always we welcome any comments you may have. Agree or disagree, all we ask it that you keep it respectful.

Cheers

Kevin, Jackie, Gavin, Annie, Tosha

15 comments - Posted by Kevin Myers at 3:11 PM - Categories: Cesar Millan | Calm Assertive Energy | The Dog Whisperer | Anti Cesar Milan | Training | Behavior

Jan 20 2010

No Magic Required

Usually when something sounds too good to be true, it is! Unfortunately making something sound too good to be true, is a great way to sell it. Imparting some “magical” or “mystical” property to a product or idea, causes the “what if” wiring that is a part of every human brain to activate. Even though a part of our brain recognizes that something is not right, there is another part of our brain that wonders; “What if it’s true?” One of the first commandments of sales is this: Fear of loss is greater than desire for gain. That’s why every car salesman you’ve ever dealt with has reminded you that if you don’t buy that car this second, it might not be there when you get back.

As I was tweeting today I came across this post from Cesar Millan:

“If you find yourself laughing at your dog’s bad behavior, stop! To a dog, the energy he senses equals affection and excitement. “

Cesar would have us believe that sensing and projecting energy are magical tools that we need to train and interact with our dogs. But as with most things, the simple truth is that patience, persistence, clear instruction, and hard work are how results are produced.

As I tweeted after Cesar’s post, dogs do not sense energy, they read body language. There is nothing magical or mystical about it. If dogs were able to sense energy, then teaching a blind or deaf dog would be a piece of cake for anyone that could produce the right energy; wouldn’t it?

It comes down to this. To train a dog you don’t need to project assertive energy, you need to present clear and instructive direction in a way your dog can understand; and the best way to do that is by proven scientific means. By using Positive Reinforcement and Classical Conditioning, the only thing magical will be the relationship you build with your dog.

Cheers

Kevin, Jackie, Gavin, Annie, Tosha

9 comments - Posted by Kevin Myers at 8:46 PM - Categories: Cesar Millan | Calm Assertive Energy | Dogs | Advocacy | Training | Behavior

Jan 16 2010

Are We Training Our Dog or Training for a Fight?

While watching the TV show The Dog Whisperer the other night, I decided to close my eyes and listen very carefully to the words and phrases being used on the show. Following is a partial list:

  • claim your space
  • confront him
  • don’t be a passive human
  • striking stance
  • primal behavior
  • master of the house
  • be dominant
  • chaos
  • be top dog
  • aggressive
  • aggression
  • attack
  • don’t be weak


If I didn’t know better, I'd think I was listening to the instructor of a self defense class.  Why does training a dog have to sound like a life and death struggle straight out of the Coliseum?

One possible answer has nothing to do with training dogs and everything to do with selling ads on TV. Drama and confrontation sell. A catchphrase like “Calm Assertive Pack Leader” is great for branding a TV show, but the meaning behind it is truly misapplied when it comes to training and interacting with domestic dogs. If you think that living with a dog means a constant battle for household supremacy, why have a dog in the first place?

The truth of the matter is that training your dog doesn’t have to be constant battle of wills and can in fact be fun and exciting for both you and your dog. By using Positive Reinforcement and Classical Conditioning, we can train our dogs without having to resort to the tactics of the schoolyard bully.

Following are just a few of the many great resources out there that deal with the science of training, proving once again that science can be fun:

As always this list is not complete and I know that there are many other great sites out there with good information on positive training. If you know of a good resource that should be listed here, just leave us a comment and we will update this post.

As an addendum to this post I would like to add a link to the site BEYOND CESAR MILLAN. For those of you who think that Cesar's methods are effective or harmless, please visit this site. It has a ton of information from qualified professionals that have studied that actual science of animal behavior and learning.

Kevin, Jackie, Gavin, Annie, Tosha

12 comments - Posted by Kevin Myers at 5:40 PM - Categories: Cesar Millan | Calm Assertive Energy | Dogs | The Dog Whisperer | Anti Cesar Milan | Advocacy | Training | Behavior