Description
Price: $17.99 - $9.99
(as of Mar 03, 2025 20:16:27 UTC – Details)
From the founder of “clicker” training, the widely praised humane approach to shaping animal behavior, comes a fascinating book—part memoir, part insight into how animals and people think and behave.
A celebrated pioneer in the field of no-punishment animal training,Karen Pryor is responsible for developing clicker training—an all-positive, safe, effective way to modify and shape animal behavior—and she has changed the lives of millions of animals. Practical, engrossing, and full of fascinating stories about Pryor’s interactions with animals of all sorts, Reaching the Animal Mind presents the sum total of her life’s work. She explains the science behind clicker training, how and why it works, and offers step-by-step instructions on how you can clicker-train any animal in your life.
For bonus video clips, slide shows, articles, downloadable exercises, and links expanding on the contents of the book, go to ReachingtheAnimalMind.com.
Publisher : Scribner; 1st edition (June 8, 2010)
Language : English
Paperback : 288 pages
ISBN-10 : 0743297776
ISBN-13 : 978-0743297776
Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
Dimensions : 6 x 0.6 x 9 inches
Customers say
Customers find the book informative and engaging. It provides valuable information on how dogs learn and how to improve training results with clicker training. The writing style is clear and easy to understand. Readers appreciate the creative, innovative, and friendly approach to teaching and training.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
poltroon –
Every animal person should read this book
When I was around 11 years old, I browsed the stacks in my local library for a book about dolphins. Among the books I took home that day was Karen Pryor’s Lads Before the Wind : Diary of a Dolphin Trainer, her account of her instant transition from the boss’ wife to the head trainer: a few weeks before the grand opening of Sea Life Park in Hawaii, the original hired trainers were gone, and there were no new ones to be had. Pryor, the only person in the group with animal training experience (she’d had dogs and ponies) was given a thick binder of instructions, some porpoises, and a whistle, and an impossible deadline. Through persistence and trial and error, they pulled it off.At first her memoir frustrated the young perfectionist me, because I wanted to read about the atlantic bottlenoses I’d seen, not these strange pacific porpoises… but not only did I read it cover to cover, I checked it out again and again. That she told not only of successes but of failures was deeply informative. It made a profound impact on how I related to animals, even if I didn’t exactly use what would later be called “clicker training” myself. When I found a copy in a used bookstore as an adult, I marveled at my good fortune, jumping up and down at my find, and I’ve been able to reread it many more times. I was surprised and pleased to discover that in fact it was still in print, and bought copies for friends. I have been recommending it to other horsemen for years as one of the best animal training books anywhere.When I found this new book, I could hardly wait to read it.The opening chapters of this latest work retell some of the same anecdotes from Sea Life Park, and at first I worried that this would just end up being a rework of that earlier memoir, perhaps with some new anecdotes blended in. To see Pryor’s work making life better for zoo animals and their keepers is a true pleasure; indeed, I’ve seen this for myself in zoos without realizing that this was becoming an organized conventional wisdom for working with animals deriving from her work – training them to present a wing, to walk from one location to another, to follow a target, and perhaps most importantly, to communicate back with their keepers. The training gives both animals and keepers more control and more fun in their environment. How many people know you can train a fish to jump through a hoop, or that a fish will sulk if it doesn’t get the reward it deserved?By the second half of the book, Pryor (who has many scientific papers to her credit) is relentlessly looking for the science. She knows that it works, and in a wide range of species. But why does it work? They do experiments comparing the use of the clicker to the use of a voice marker for training dogs, and to my surprise, the clicker is hugely more successful. (We humans do babble on.) She seeks answers from neuroscientists, finds dead end after dead end until finally she finds the group who knows exactly what is going on, and is surprised that everyone didn’t know that a clicker event marker goes straight to the amygdalia – what I personally think of as the “lizard brain”, where all our instinctive reactions are stored. The same instant and permanent learning that occurs that keeps you from putting your finger in the fire a second time is occurring with clicker training. A click is information, and all brains are wired to crave information.She finishes up with applications of the clicker technique – truly a new training technology – to humans. Human gymnasts can be told that handstands must be vertical, but when they’re upside down, they don’t know where vertical is at first. A clicker – with the term changed to audible tag – can be pressed exactly at the vertical point with more precision and in less time than the coach can say, “there!” And human brains, hearing a click rather than trying to do the sensory processing to follow the words, can take a snapshot of exactly what that felt like right then and repeat it. Tagging can be used to help highly tuned and motivated athletes by both breaking down a skill into very small pieces and by giving very precise nonverbal information. And, of course, this means it can have value in other situations, where people speak different languages or who have no language.In the appendix, there are a multitude of references, including pointers to online videos of some of the training incidents reported, and some simple shaping recipes to teach a cat to give a high-five, and a dog to touch a target. I appreciated how they were broken down into very small details, down to practicing your hand coordination beforehand to know that you can click the clicker when you mean to, and present food tidbits without fumbling.This is an outstanding work that is certain to become a classic. I’m looking forward to buying copies of this book for my friends, too.
Stephanie Philp –
Not Just for Animals!
I feel the need to stress, up front, that while this book would appear to be a book about training animals, it has fundamental applications for anyone wishing to change or shape behaviour.You may have heard of Karen Pryor because of her now famous book, Don’t Shoot the Dog!: The New Art of Teaching and Training. It was purchased by many dog lovers who then discovered it wasn’t necessarily about training dogs!Reaching The Animal MindKaren Pryor’s book is based on BF Skinner’s research with operant conditioning. The clicker is basically a metal tongue in a plastic housing that makes a click sound when pressed and is used to `mark’ quite specifically the desired behaviour. There is hard scientific evidence to back up her work. Pryor, however, avoids the usual boring academic style of writing in favour of a lighthearted approach that makes it fun and humorous to read.Pryor began training dolphins at Sea Life Park in Hawaii in 1961. Remember that very little was known about dolphins in 1961. Her main qualification for getting the job was that she was married to the Director of the park.The other trainers were having only limited success with training the wild caught dolphins. This book follows Pryor’s journey as she trains creatures as diverse as wolves, dolphins, horses, elephants, fish and dogs. She even trained a hermit crab to ring a bell.Have an open mindThis book should be read with an open mind and the many step-by-step examples make it easy to understand why clicker training can be used to train ANY animal (including the human animal). There are many short videos on her web site showing how clickers are used with animals and people to achieve amazingly quick and often stunning results.When used with humans, clicker training is renamed TAG training (Teaching with Acoustical Guidance). Although it’s exactly the same, some objected to the term `clicker training’ being used with people because it’s become associated with animal training.Improve sports performanceGolfers, gymnasts and other sports people have all improved their performance with TAG training and children are able to TAG each other as peers. Autistic or disabled children have been taught ways to improve their behaviour. A group of fishermen were also trained to improve their performance despite language barriers. There’s a description of how a group of young girls were taught to do a Fosbury Flop over a high jump in just 15 minutes of TAG training. You can watch the excellent video that goes with it on the Reaching the Animal Mind web site.The impact on the brainKaren proves that you can train any animal to do anything that it’s physically and mentally capable of doing. The thing that I’ve found the most fun is exploring just how far those mental and physical capabilities extend.One of the most fascinating things about this book is that the `click’ sound the clicker makes has a direct impact on the amygdala, the reptilian part of the brain. It registers the click as `new information’ and all brains are wired to search out new information.Absolutely fascinating reading and recommended for those who have an interest in how people and animals learn and how behaviour can be shaped using only positive reinforcement.
Marco Aurelio Núñez –
Karen Pryor es una de las pioneras en el entrenamiento con refuerzo positivo usando herramientas como clicker o silbato, a través de anécdotas ella describe cómo funciona el condicionamiento clásico y operante con diferentes especies.
Client d’Amazon –
Très éclairant en ce qui concerne les apprentissages (du chien en ce qui me concerne). A recommander !
AMIT KUMAR –
In life several days go by when I learn nothing New on my subject of liking. Even if when I learn one new thing its worth all the money. This book has several things I did Not know at age 67 ! So….And Amazon delivery was prompt.
CD –
I love this book! Lot of wonderful stories about animal training. She also gives good effort at explaining the science behind clicker training. Karen Pryor herself has an extensive experience in animal training, she is not just someone with just theories behind the training but her methods actually works. Thanks to her, animals are trained more humanely
adriana –
facile da leggere, economico, , ottimo per insegnare con il metodo del ^ clicker ^ ai cani e altri animali qualunche cosa si voglia.