| Literature DB >> 32610513 |
Erica N Feuerbacher1, Kristy L Muir2.
Abstract
Separation-related problem behavior (SRPB) is a severe behavioral issue in which dogs engage in a variety of undesirable behaviors when the owner is absent, such as destructive behavior and excessive vocalization. Given the severity and high prevalence of SRPB, finding effective treatments is crucial. To date, most treatments have relied on habituation to increase tolerance to owner absence. Additionally, research has typically not utilized direct observations of the dog's behavior and the treatment implemented with unknown treatment integrity. We evaluated an operant approach to SRPB using owner return as the reinforcer. After collecting baseline, we enrolled five dogs for treatment. Treatment involved differential reinforcement of either absence of problem behavior or occurrence of specific desirable behaviors. Behavioral criteria for delivering reinforcement changed based on the dog's performance assessed through direct observation. We coached owners to ensure treatment integrity on each trial. From baseline, mean time to SRPB was 27.1 s. During treatment, all dogs increased their ability to stay alone without SRPB compared to baseline, indicating that contingent owner return can be a useful treatment. However, despite four training sessions, only one dog was able to stay alone for over 5 min. Our data demonstrate the slow-going progression of this SPRB treatment and the challenges of this behavioral issue.Entities:
Keywords: behavioral treatment; domestic dog; operant conditioning; reinforcement; separation-related problem behavior
Year: 2020 PMID: 32610513 PMCID: PMC7401621 DOI: 10.3390/ani10071110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Dog Demographics. Breeds are based on owner reports. Ages are reported in months (m) and years (y). Sex is indicated by M (male) or F (female). N indicates the dog is neutered and S indicates the dog is spayed.
| Dog | Breed | Age | Sex |
|---|---|---|---|
| Harrison | Rhodesian ridgeback x | 2 y | NM |
| Mei | Boston terrier | 8 m | SF |
| Sadie | Terrier x | 3 y | SF |
| Scarlet | Pit bull/Catahoula x | 2 y | SF |
| Tristan | Chihuahua | 3 y | NM |
Behavioral Definitions. Definitions follow those of prior research [20]. Behaviors were coded as duration (D) or frequency (F).
| Code | Behavior | Behavioral Definition |
|---|---|---|
| EX | Exploration (D) | Motor activity directed toward physical aspects of the environment, including sniffing, and gentle oral examination, such as licking |
| LO | Locomotion (D) | Walking or running around without exploring the environment |
| OB | Oral behavior (D) | Any vigorous behavior directed toward the environment/cage using the mouth (including chewing, biting, shaking, pulling with the mouth) |
| SC | Scratching (D) | All active behaviors resulting in physical contact with the cage/door, including scratching the cage/door with the paws, jumping on the cage/door, handling with the forelimbs |
| OE | Oriented to the environment (D) | Sitting, standing, or lying down (the head does not rest on the ground) with obvious orientation toward the physical or social environment, including sniffing, close visual inspection, distant visual inspection (vigilance or scanning) |
| PA | Passive behavior (D) | Lying down with the head on the ground without any obvious orientation toward the physical or social environment |
| PT | Panting (D) | Panting |
| WH | Whining (D) | Whining |
| BA | Barking (D) | Barking |
| CI | Circling (D) | Movement of the dog in circles |
| PL | Play (D) | Any vigorous or galloping gaited behavior directed towards a toy; including chewing, biting, shaking from side to side, scratching or batting with the paw, chasing rolling balls, and tossing using the mouth. Although the dog may take the objects into its mouth, destruction is not included in this category |
| GR | Grooming (D) | Action of cleaning the body surface by licking, nibbling, picking, rubbing, scratching, et cetera, directed toward the animal’s body |
| ‘ | Ears back (D) | Ears flattened and back |
| HO | Howling (D) | Howling |
| TR | Trembling (D) | Trembling/shaking movements of the body or head |
| PU | Paw up (D) | Front limb raised |
| LL | Lip licking (F) | Part of tongue is shown and moved along the upper lip |
| YA | Yawning (F) | Yawning |
| EL | Elimination (F) | Defecation or urination in sitting or standing position |
Figure 1(a). Mean and SD of the proportion of time dogs engaged in various behavioral categories during Baseline. (b). Individual dogs’ proportion of time engaged in various behavioral categories. EX—exploration, LO—locomotion, OB—oral behavior, SC—scratching, OE—oriented to environment, PA—passive behavior, PT—panting, WH—whining, BA—barking, CI—circling, PL—playing.
Descriptive statistics of baseline and treatment. Longest time alone without problem behavior (PB) exceeded highest criteria completed as it took owners a second or more to return once the contingency was met and dogs in differential reinforcement of alternative behavior (DRA) did not always immediately emit the target behavior immediately. Conditional probability is the probability that a dog would exhibit PB on a subsequent trial if it had exhibited PB on the previous trial; this is despite the subsequent trial having lower criteria than the first trial when the dog exhibited PB.
| Dog | Latency to PB (Baseline) | Number of Treatment Trials | Highest Criteria Completed | Longest Time Alone without PB | Percentage Successful Trials | Conditional Probability of PB |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harrison | 34.8 s | 76 | 300 s DRA (lying down) | 326.8 s | 96.1 | 0.33 |
| Mei | 1.2 s | 65 | 120 s DRO | 122.2 s | 67.7 | 0.38 |
| Sadie | 7.6 s | 148 | 60 s DRO | 64.0 s | 75.0 | 0.30 |
| Scarlet | 96 s | 70 | 150 s DRA (lying down) | 247.7 s | 94.3 | 0.00 |
| Tristan | 0 s | 90 | 10 s DRO | 12.3 s | 64.4 | 0.50 |
| Mean | 27.1 s | 89.8 | 128 s | 154.6 s | 79.5 | 0.30 |
Figure 2Highest criteria reached (hatched bars) and longest amount of time alone without PB (open bars) during Treatment for each dog. Symbols indicate latency to specific PB for each dog as observed in Baseline.
Target behaviors. Problem behaviors identified from Baseline for each dog and other behaviors that were not problem behaviors but were undesirable and would not be reinforced during differential reinforcement of other behavior (DRO). Specific desirable behaviors reinforced in a DRA for Harrison and Sadie.
| Dog | Problem Behaviors (Baseline) | Additional Behaviors Not Reinforced (DRO) | Specific Desirable Behaviors Reinforced (DRA) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Harrison | Whining, scratching, oral behavior (destruction) | N/A | Head turn (started Trial 4); Sit/down (started Trial 8) |
| Mei | Barking, whining, scratching | N/A | N/A |
| Sadie | Barking, whining | N/A | N/A |
| Scarlet | Oral behavior (destruction) | Vigilance (running to window) | Sit/down (started Trial 31) |
| Tristan | Barking | N/A | N/A |
Behavioral criteria during treatment. Criteria changes for dogs in the DRO or DRA. Moving to the next criteria required two successful trials without problem behavior at the previous level. If problem behavior occurred on one trial, the criteria returned to the last successful criteria. For Sadie and Tristan, initial DRO criteria varied until the owner could successfully exit the house without the dog exhibiting PB, after which they followed the DRO schedule.
| DRO | DRA |
|---|---|
| Owner exit + immediate return | Target behavior + immediate return |
| Owner exit + 5 s | Target behavior + 5 s |
| Owner exit + 10 s | Target behavior + 10 s |
| Owner exit + 15 s | Target behavior + 15 s |
| Owner exit + 30 s | Target behavior + 30 s |
| Owner exit + 45 s | Target behavior + 45 s |
| Owner exit + 60 s | Target behavior + 60 s |
| Owner exit + 90 s | Target behavior + 90 s |
| Owner exit + 120 s | Target behavior + 120 s |
| Owner exit + 150 s | Target behavior + 150 s |
| Owner exit + 180 s | Target behavior + 180 s |
| Owner exit + 210 s | Target behavior + 210 s |
Criteria changes for dogs across sessions. The sessions (1–4) for each dog are shown. The number of trials in that session is given in (). Initial Target Criteria reflect the treatment goal for Trial 1 of that session. Initial Successful Criteria reflect the criteria in place when the dog had its first successful trial in that session (no PB). End Successful Criteria reflect the last criteria in place when the dog has its last successful trial in that session. Highest Successful Criteria reflect the highest criteria in place during that session in which the dog had a successful trial.
| Dog | Initial Target Criteria | Initial Successful Criteria | End Successful Criteria | Highest Successful Criteria |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| 1 (30) | DRO + 0 s | DRO + 0 s | DRA (sit/down) + 30 s | DRA (sit/down) + 30 s |
| 2 (20) | DRA (sit/down) + 10 s | DRA (sit/down) + 10 s | DRA (sit/down) + 60 s | DRA (sit/down) + 60 s |
| 3 (14) | DRA (sit/down) + 30 s | DRA (sit/down) + 30 s | DRA (sit/down) + 210 s | DRA (sit/down) + 210 s |
| 4 (12) | DRA (sit/down) + 30 s | DRA (sit/down) + 30 s | DRA (sit/down) + 300 s | DRA (sit/down) + 300 s |
|
| ||||
| 1 (13) | DRO + 0 s | DRO + 0 s | DRO + 5 s | DRO + 5 s |
| 2 (18) | DRO + 0 s | DRO + 0 s | DRO + 5 s | DRO + 5 s |
| 3 (11) | DRO + 30 s | DRO + 0 s | DRO + 15 s | DRO + 15 s |
| 4 (23) | DRO + 10 s | DRO + 10 s | DRO + 30 s | DRO + 120 s |
|
| ||||
| 1 (32) | DRO + 0 s | DRO + 0 s | DRO + 0 s | DRO + 10 s |
| 2 (44) | DRO + 0 s | Owner steps over barrier + 5 s | DRO + 5 s | DRO + 15 s |
| 3 (33) | DRO + 0 s | Owner steps over barrier + 0 s | DRO + 60 s | DRO + 60 s |
| 4 (39) | DRO + 0 s | Owner steps over barrier + 0 s | DRO + 10 s | DRO + 15 s |
|
| ||||
| 1 (25) | DRO + 0 s | DRO + 0 s | DRO + 150 s | DRO + 150 s |
| 2 (15) | DRO + 15 s | DRO + 15 s | DRA (sit/down) + 90 s | DRA (sit/down) + 90 s |
| 3 (19) | DRA (sit/down) + 30 s | DRA (sit/down) + 30 s | DRA (sit/down) + 120 s | DRA (sit/down) + 120 s |
| 4 (11) | DRA (sit/down) + 60 s | DRA (sit/down) + 60 s | DRA (sit/down) + 120 s | DRA (sit/down) + 150 s |
|
| ||||
| 1 (14) | DRO + 0 s | Walks past crate + 0 s | Opens door halfway + 0 s | Opens door fully + 0 s |
| 2 (18) | Opens door fully + 0 s | Opens door fully + 0 s | Opens door halfway + 0 s | Opens door fully + 0 s |
| 3 (33) | Foot across threshold + 0 s | Step to threshold + 0 s | DRO + 0 s | DRO + 0 s |
| 4 (25) | Foot across threshold + 0 s | Step to threshold + 0 s | DRO + 10 s | DRO + 10 s |
Figure 3Trial-by-trial data for each dog (a. Harrison; b. Scarlet; c. Mei; d. Sadie; e. Tristan) during Treatment. On each trial, we plotted either the time the dog was alone (for successful trials with no PB; open symbols) or the latency to PB on unsuccessful trials (filled symbols). Circle symbols indicate that the criteria were such that the owner was exiting the house on that trial. Square symbols indicate criteria were such that the owner was staying inside the house on that trial. For all trials in which the owner remained in the house, time dog was alone are recorded as 0 s. Latency to any PB that occurred while the owner was still in the house was recorded as 0 s. Thus, open circles with latency 0 s indicate the owner successfully exited the house without the dog exhibiting PB (DRO + 0 s), whereas open squares indicate a successful trial in which the owner did not exit the house. Time alone on successful trials might exceed the DRO or DRA time criteria if (1) the dog was engaged in vigilant behavior on a DRO and we waited for vigilant behavior to end before enforcing the DRO contingency (vigilant behavior was not reinforced but was not considered PB), or (2) the dog did not engage in the target desirable behavior for some time on a DRA. Dotted vertical lines indicate the end of one session and the start of a new session.
Figure 4Latency to target desirable behaviors across trials for the two dogs (a. Harrison; b. Scarlet) in the DRA condition. The trials on which the various DRA schedules were first started are indicated by arrows. Dotted vertical lines indicate the end of one session and the start of a new session. Latencies that are 0 indicate that the dog was engaged in the desirable behavior (e.g., lying down) as the owner left and did not get up when the owner left. Instead, it remained in that position and, after the specified interval of required good behavior elapsed, met the contingency for owner return.