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Research article summary:
Selecting shelter dogs for service dog training.
Abstract Extract: Service dogs are an essential aid to persons with disabilities, providing independence, mobility, and improved self-esteem. Because of these proven benefits, the growing se of service dogs is creating a demand and supply crisis. One major cause is the ... (Full abstract text below) Published 2002
in Journal: J Appl Anim Welf Sci
(Language : eng)
Full Pubmed Extract
This information was retrieved, real-time, on your behalf from the public area of the Pubmed website:
1. J Appl Anim Welf Sci.
2002 ;5(1):43-62
Selecting shelter dogs for service dog training.
Weiss E
Department of Psychology, Wichita State University and, Sedgwick County Zoo Wichita, Kansas 67212, USA. research@scz.org
Service dogs are an essential aid to persons with disabilities, providing independence, mobility, and improved self-esteem. Because of these proven benefits, the growing se of service dogs is creating a demand and supply crisis. One major cause is the 50% verage dropout rate for dogs selected for training. Weiss and Greenber (1997) re-cently found that a dog, successful on the most commonly used selection test items, was as likely to be either a poor or a good candidate for service work. The experiment presented here evaluated test items developed by the author in 15 years of experience with dogs. The test items were administered to 75 dogs from the Kansas Humane So-ciety. Once tested, the dogs received obedience and retrieval training. The experiment assessed each dog on behavior over 5 weeks of training versus performance on each selection test item. A subset of the selection items, combined in a regression analysis, accounted for 36.4% of the variance with R = 0.603. This research also revealed a reli-able test for dog aggression without risking injury to dog or tester. Items for testing in-cluded fear, motivation, and submission. Another set of selection items reliably pre-dicted the trait of "high energy" commonly described as "high strung." Future research should involve investigating the effectiveness of both cortisol levels and blood pressure in predicting traits to help strengthen the predictive value of the tool and then testing on dogs trained to be full service dogs.
PMID : 12738588 [PubMed - Indexed for MEDLINE]
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Full Author Information
| First Name | LastName | Initials |
| Emily | Weiss | E |
Affiliation: Department of Psychology, Wichita State University and, Sedgwick County Zoo Wichita, Kansas 67212, USA. research@scz.org
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MESH categories and related page links
This article was linked to the MESH categories shown on the left below. The links on the right are related Memletics pages.
Category links from this article:- Accident Prevention
- Aggression - psychology
- Animals
- Avoidance Learning
- Behavior, Animal
- Bonding, Human-Pet
- Conditioning, Classical
- Conditioning, Operant
- Disabled Persons - psychology
- Dogs - psychology
- Fear - psychology
- Female
- Humans
- Male
- Motivation
- Safety
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