Abstract
Assistance
dogs are trained to help people with various physical and mental
handicaps. These dogs are selected using a test comprising several
behavioral components. Anecdotal reports have shown that only about 50%
of the dogs so selected successfully complete training and become
assistance dogs. Traditionally training centers had used puppies, but
recently some trainers have begun to use dogs from animal shelters and
pounds. This study randomly chose six males and three female adult dogs
of appropriate breed types, from a shelter environment and conducted an
11-item selection test on each. The dogs were then trained in both basic
obedience and a retrieval task. We found no correlation between an
animals' overall performance on the selection test and its ability to
complete the retrieval task. One behavior trait, fear/submission,
however, was predictable from the selection phase.
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