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"Products Arti 1a2 cles ClickerTraining Seminars Go Shopping! E-mail to us         Clicker Traini 193 ng: What it isn't There are three general opinions of clicker training: it's the hottest thing since sliced bread, a passing fad or an annoyance, on par with fleas at a breed show. Often, the latter two  opinions are formed after hearing too much of the former. The rhetoric of some clicker trainer 192 s sounds like a cross between an infomercial and some kind of religious experience.  Deciding which opinion fits your training style begins with knowing what clicker training is -- and what it isn't. Top 10 Misconceptions About Clicker Training  1) Clicker training is "all positive." -- No method of training is "a 190 ll positive." By scientific definition, the removal of a desired reward is a "negative punishment." People who say  they are using "all motivational" or "all positive" methods are merely suggesting that they don't like using punishment -- so who does? It isn't that clicker trainers don't use aversive& 190 nbsp; control, it's that the sequence is different. In clicker training, aversive control is generally never used to create behaviors. Needed corrections are almost always applied at the end of  the learning cycle, after the dog has a firm knowledge of the behavior. When you use this sequence, correctly, you may be sur"
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