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Journal Article

Citation

Echterling-Savage K, DiGennaro Reed FD, Miller LK, Savage S. J. Appl. Anim. Welf. Sci. 2014; 18(2): 181-197.

Affiliation

Beyond the Dog, LLC, Kansas City , Missouri.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/10888705.2014.977383

PMID

25401975

Abstract

Problem behavior of companion animals poses a threat to caregivers, other targets of problem behavior (e.g., strangers, other nonhuman animals), and those animals engaging in problem behavior. This study examined the effects of an aggression reduction procedure (ARP) on dog problem behavior. After a baseline condition showing caregivers were unsuccessful in reducing dog aggression and the behaviors preceding aggression, caregivers were trained to implement a procedure to address dog problem behavior in relatively simple contexts. Generalization programming then was used to target caregiver plan implementation and dog problem behavior in more complex contexts. The ARP effectively reduced dog aggression for all dogs. A slight reduction and increased variability in dog precursor behavior was observed when the ARP was implemented. In addition, caregivers and experts rated the goals, procedures, and effects as acceptable. Implications of these findings are discussed.


Language: en

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