Address unwanted dog behaviors through desensitization, counter-conditioning, and management. Covers reactivity (to dogs, people, sounds), separation anxiety, resource guarding, excessive barking, and leash pulling using force-free methods with systematic threshold management. Use when a dog shows reactivity toward other dogs, people, or stimuli; when separation anxiety causes destructive behavior or vocalization; when resource guarding is present; or when behaviors like excessive barking or leash pulling interfere with daily life — after basic obedience is established.
Address unwanted dog behaviors through desensitization, counter-conditioning, and environmental management.
Precision matters — vague descriptions lead to vague interventions.
Behavior Analysis (ABC Model):
+-------------+------------------------------------------+
| Component | Define Specifically |
+-------------+------------------------------------------+
| Antecedent | What happens BEFORE the behavior? |
| (Trigger) | e.g., "sees another dog within 30 feet" |
+-------------+------------------------------------------+
| Behavior | What EXACTLY does the dog do? |
| | e.g., "stiffens, stares, then lunges and |
| | barks" |
+-------------+------------------------------------------+
| Consequence | What happens AFTER the behavior? |
| | e.g., "owner pulls the dog away; the |
| | other dog leaves" (behavior is reinforced |
| | because the trigger goes away) |
+-------------+------------------------------------------+
Threshold Mapping:
- At what distance/intensity does the dog first notice the trigger? (alert)
- At what distance/intensity does the dog become unable to take treats? (over threshold)
- The working zone is BELOW threshold — where the dog notices but can still think
Expected: A precise behavior definition with identified trigger, threshold distance, and current consequence pattern.
On failure: If the behavior seems to have no consistent trigger, keep a log for one week: date, time, context, behavior, consequence. Patterns often emerge that are not obvious in the moment.
Strategy Selection:
+----------------------------+-----------------------------------+-----------------+
| Behavior | Primary Strategy | Timeline |
+----------------------------+-----------------------------------+-----------------+
| Reactivity (dogs/people) | Desensitization + counter- | 4-12 weeks |
| | conditioning (DS/CC) | |
+----------------------------+-----------------------------------+-----------------+
| Separation anxiety | Graduated absence protocol + | 6-16 weeks |
| | management | |
+----------------------------+-----------------------------------+-----------------+
| Resource guarding | Trade-up protocol + | 4-8 weeks |
| | approach desensitization | |
+----------------------------+-----------------------------------+-----------------+
| Excessive barking | Identify function → teach | 2-6 weeks |
| | alternative behavior | |
+----------------------------+-----------------------------------+-----------------+
| Leash pulling | Penalty yards (stop when | 2-4 weeks |
| | pulling) + reward position | |
+----------------------------+-----------------------------------+-----------------+
Expected: A specific strategy selected for the identified behavior.
On failure: If the behavior is severe (biting with contact, extreme panic, self-harm), refer to a certified applied animal behaviorist (CAAB) or veterinary behaviorist (DACVB). This skill covers moderate behavioral issues, not clinical cases.
The core protocol for reactivity and fear-based behaviors.
DS/CC Protocol:
1. FIND the threshold: position the dog where the trigger is visible
but the dog is still calm enough to eat treats
2. MARK and TREAT: trigger appears → mark → treat → treat → treat
(classical conditioning: trigger predicts good things)
3. CRITERIA: the dog should be:
- Able to eat treats
- Ears relaxed or neutral (not pinned forward)
- Loose body posture
- Able to look at the trigger and then look back at the handler
4. DECREASE DISTANCE gradually:
Session 1: 50 feet from trigger
Session 3: 45 feet
Session 5: 40 feet
(Only decrease when the dog is consistently relaxed at current distance)
5. SESSION STRUCTURE:
- 5-15 minutes maximum
- 3-5 trigger exposures per session
- End BEFORE the dog goes over threshold
- If the dog goes over threshold, increase distance immediately
and end on a calmer note
6. PROGRESS INDICATORS:
- Dog looks at trigger, then immediately looks at handler ("check-in")
- Dog's threshold distance decreases over sessions
- Recovery time after exposure shortens
- Dog's body language at threshold becomes more relaxed
Expected: Over weeks, the dog's threshold distance decreases and emotional response to the trigger shifts from fear/aggression to neutral or positive.
On failure: If no progress after 3-4 weeks of consistent sessions, reassess: (1) are you working below threshold? (2) are the treats high-value enough? (3) is the trigger exposure too frequent outside of training (flooding undoes DS/CC)? (4) consider consulting a professional.
Training changes behavior over time. Management prevents rehearsal now.
Management Strategies:
+----------------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Behavior | Management During Training Period |
+----------------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Dog reactivity | Walk at off-peak hours; cross the street |
| | when another dog approaches; use visual |
| | barriers (parked cars, bushes) |
+----------------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Separation anxiety | Do not leave the dog alone beyond their |
| | current tolerance; use daycare, pet |
| | sitter, or take the dog with you |
+----------------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Resource guarding | Do not approach while eating; trade up |
| | from a distance; manage access to |
| | high-value items |
+----------------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Excessive barking | Block visual triggers (frosted window |
| | film); provide enrichment; address |
| | underlying cause (boredom, anxiety) |
+----------------------------+------------------------------------------+
Every rehearsal of the unwanted behavior strengthens it.
Management prevents rehearsal while training builds the new response.
Expected: The unwanted behavior is not being practiced outside of controlled training sessions.
On failure: If management is impossible (e.g., cannot avoid all dog encounters), reduce training criteria to match reality. Some environmental exposure is unavoidable; ensure training sessions provide a strong enough counter-experience.
basic-obedience — foundation commands that behavioral modification builds upon; reliable recall is essential for safety