Misconceptions of the Mythical Alpha Dog
Written by Dr. Ian Dunbar
Taken from the Dog Star Daily blog and can be found here.
People are fond of extrapolating popular, but misunderstood and bowdlerized
accounts of wolf-behavior to dog-human interactions and training methods. The
assumption is that the dog is out to dominate us and as a result, far too much
training advice is unfeeling and adversarial with a sickening reliance on
physical domination. So many pop-psychology training books have been written as
if people are wolves, rather than humans with supposedly superior brainpower. If
only the fall-out from this absurd view were not so unpleasant, the whole
premise would be utterly laughable. People seem to be hung up on the questions,
“But WHY did he do it?” “Why does he act that way? Why don’t we simply teach
dogs how we would like them to act. If we find a dog’s behavior to be
inappropriate or unacceptable, we must take a little responsibility here because
we are the dog’s teacher and so, why don’t we just change the dog’s behavior to
our liking.
Notions of a “dominance hierarchy” with an “alpha wolf” being the
all-powerful, supreme leader are simply incorrect. Such a muddled and simplistic
view is a bit of an insult to the wolves’ most complex and sophisticated social
system. This is not the way that wolves live together. Wolves live together in
large groups based on family units — in fact, not that much different than the
way large groups of humans live together.
Moreover, dog behavior is very different from wolf behavior, especially in
terms of their social interactions with people. In fact, few dogs live in packs
at all. When dogs do live in groups, certainly they organize themselves in
hierarchies ranked from topdog to underdog, but the hierarchies are neither
created nor maintained by physical dominance. Very young puppies may play-fight
when establishing hierarchy within their litter, but when the puppies enter the
group there is simply no contest — developmental nolo contendre. The
mere thought of a competition between an eight-week-old puppy and a six-year-old
adult male would be too silly for words. All puppies enter an adult group on the
bottom rungs of the social ladder and there they remain until older dogs pass
on. In groups of domestic dogs, hierarchies are not created or maintained by
physical domination and aggression, rather the hierarchies are created to
prevent aggression, disagreements and dogfights.
My dogs have informed me that they would like similar relationships with
people. Dogs would much prefer to just get along. Dogs don’t want to be
physically bullied all the time; they very much wish that physical aggression
and domination be excluded from their social relationships with people. Dogs
simply cannot understand why some people want the relationship to be so
adversarial.
Today the Family — Tomorrow the World!
From an assortment of books, I have discovered the following cautionary
“advice” for owners. Never let a dog stare or jump-up, never stand, crouch or
kneel down in front of a dog, never look a dog in the eyes, or reach over his
head, never loom over a dog and reach down around his neck, never get down on
the floor or allow a dog to stand over you, never give a dog food treats or
human food, never allow a dog to eat before the family or go out of a door
first, never allow a dog on furniture, upstairs, in the bedroom, or on the bed,
never let a dog mount your leg, never let a puppy mouth or bite, and never play
chase, tug o' war, or play-fight with a dog. Instead, novice owners are
routinely advised to enforce “elevation dominance”, “dominance down-stays”,
physical restraint and discipline and especially, the “alpha-rollover” —
grabbing a dog by the jowls and forcing him onto his back.
All of these recommendations destroy the fun and enjoyment of living with a
dog, most recommendations are just too silly for words, some are
counterproductive and others are downright dangerous.
The above behaviors and actions were misconstrued as the dog's intention of
dominating people even though these behaviors and situations have absolutely
nothing at all to do with social rank or aggression during dog-human
interactions. Basically, if an owner is OK with the dog’s behavior, then there
is no problem, whereas if the owner is worried about the dog’s behavior and can
neither prevent nor control it, then there is a problem.
Misconceptions of the Mythical Alpha Dog
A number of dog training texts cite pilo-erection, prolonged barking and
growling, snarling and snapping, food protection, and otherwise threatening
people as examples of aggression and alpha-status. Usually though, these
behaviors are indicative of insecurity and may be easily prevented or resolved
by comprehensive socialization, desensitization and oodles of classical
conditioning. Dogs feel the need to threaten people because they themselves feel
threatened by people. In terms of dog-dog interactions, threatening, growling
and fighting are characteristic of middle-ranking male dogs that lack confidence
of their social standing. Top dogs seldom growl or threaten, they don't need to.
Underdogs seldom growl or threaten, they would be silly to. In our study of dog
social hierarchies, the two top male dogs were pretty cool customers — they
seldom threatened and growled and hardly ever fought. Instead they were
perfectly happy to share a bone with other dogs, whereas the middle-ranking
males protected the bone with extreme machismo — a noisy and embarrassing
advertisement of their lack of confidence.
Counterproductive Advice
No handling and gentling? No puppy-biting? But physical restraint and
dominance instead? This has to be the most time-consuming, difficult, and
potentially dangerous way to “train” any animal! Many of the above cautions are
not without reason. However, whereas they may be sound advice when dealing with
an unfamiliar dog, and good advice for children interacting with any dog, such
recommendations are just too silly for words when generalized to living with a
dog that you know.
Puppy biting is normal, natural and necessary.
In fact, it is the puppy that doesn't mouth and bite that augurs ill for the
future, since he has never had the opportunity to develop bite inhibition. Of
course puppy biting has to be eliminated before adolescence, but via a specific
four-step process, whereby the pup first learns to inhibit the force of his
biting before he is taught to stop biting (now modified to gentle
mouthing) altogether.
Similarly, if played correctly, games of tag, tug o' war and play-fighting
all serve to maintain the dog's bite inhibition, to teach specific rules and to
practice control at times when the dog is excited. If the owner does not play by
the rules and is out of control, the dog will become out of control and overly
excited. Since many people (especially men and children) are going to play these
games with the dog anyway, we should teach them how to play with the dog
properly in a controlled fashion so that the games become both beneficial and
enjoyable.
The dog's supposed desire for domination offers a convenient excuse to
psychologically and physically abuse the dog under the guise of training. These
misconceptions prompt procedures in which people are recommended to physically
dominate and/or intimidate the dog, rather than building the dog's confidence
and teaching him that there is no need to feel threatened by people and
therefore, no reason for biting them. For the general dog-owning public, the
very concept of physical domination is as ridiculous as it is dangerous.
Certainly, an experienced trainer might be able to flip the majority of dogs
into supine restraint (although I fail to see why), but few novice dog owners
would be silly enough to try, and no child and few adults could possibly
succeed. How can a dog possibly view a four year-old child as an alpha animal,
and how can a child possibly physically dominate any dog. The very concept is
preposterous pop-psychology. Sillier yet, is when adult humans try to
impersonate dogs during training — trying to reprimand dogs with open-gape pins,
scruff shakes and “alpha rollovers”.
Certainly there is no more effective reprimand than a bitch chastising her
pups; unfortunately, less than one owner in a thousand could match the sheer
speed, the precise timing and the gentleness of a bitch's rebuke. It is
important for dog professionals to recommend training procedures and reprimands
that are within the skill-set of all dog owners, especially children, i.e., to
teach control methods, to teach compliance — happy and willing compliance.
Come on, let’s wise up and train this dog properly, rather than citing
dominance as an excuse to vent our frustrations on the poorly educated critter.
Reading a dominance motive into the dog's behavior and responding with
physically aggressive control measures severely restricts the dog from enjoying
life as a dog, just as it inhibits dog owners from enjoying life as owners.
No Fun for Dogs?
No barking, urine marking, stealing food, jumping-up and mounting? But all
these are signs of a perfectly normal, healthy dog. Excessive barking may be
controlled by feeding the dog only from chewtoys and by teaching the dog to
“Woof” and "Shush" on cue. In-house scent marking is the signal for some basic
housetraining. Stealing is indicative of an ill-trained dog living with an owner
who continues to leave tempting items within reach. Dogs jump-up as a natural
greeting and friendly appeasement gesture that has been unintentionally
reinforced since puppyhood. Train your dog to "Sit" when greeting people and
maybe to "Give a Hug" on request, when and if appropriate. Not coming when
called has absolutely nothing to do with dominance, rather it simply advertises
insufficient training by an owner who continues to let the dog off-leash in
distracting and potentially dangerous settings. Mounting is the result of a
misdirected sexual urge — but the dog is trying to “love us to death” not kill
us. The dog wants to mount something and a cat, a cushion, or a great aunt's
left leg, are sometimes the best options at hand. I wouldn't dream of allowing
my dog to mount an unfamiliar dog, let alone a person. Mounting other dogs may
lead to dog-dog fighting and owner-owner aggression. But the point is, we manage
to control our equally vibrant, human sexual impulses in public and dogs can do
likewise, if so educated. Simply request your dog to sit or lie down. Check out
amorous Dolce, who is about to mount another dog until his owner requests him to
sit. End of problem. (SIRIUS® Adult Dog Training
DVD)
No Fun for Owners?
No hugs, no pats, no treats, no gazing in the dog's eyes? I mean, what on
earth is the point of owning a dog if you cannot enjoy his company? It’s as
silly as not being alloed to hug your spouse. At times I love Dune to jump-up
and give me a canine clinch on request but I would never let him
jump-up on me or anybody else of his own accord. Dune is happy, he can sometimes
jump-up and I like the occasional happy hug. Many times he stands over me, when
I'm lying on the floor, sacked-out on the couch, or when he checks to see if I
am awake in the mornings. I play with him on the floor. We have a lot of fun
together. Of course, he doesn't realize that much of the play (patting, gazing,
hugging) is gentling and other anti-aggressiveness exercises (reaching/grabbing,
staring and restraint). He has to feel secure and confident standing over people
and staring in their faces because he looks down on many children when they are
standing up. And anyway my niece and nephew seem to spend most of their time
playing on the floor. I allow him (and little Hugo) to settle on the couch with
us and watch nature programs on the telly. I allow him to rest his chin on the
bed for an early morning nuzzle and once I am truly awake, every morning, I
invite each dog up on the bed for a wakey-time smooch. They are happy for the
comfort and the privilege and I am happy for the companionship.
Rules for Rules' Sake
It would be severely negligent not to build up the dog's confidence regarding
the actions of family members, friends, children and strangers, or not to
perform essential bite-inhibition and confidence-building exercises. However,
whether or not to allow the dog indoors, in the living room, on the couch,
upstairs, or on the bed, whether the dog should have an armchair for to himself
(as Claude does), or whether to play specific controlled games should be left to
each individual dog owner. If the owner wants the dog on the couch — Fine! If
the owner thinks that the dog's place is on the floor, downstairs, or outside —
Fine! (Although most Dobermans and Greyhounds would have a dim view of the
disparity between human luxury and canine Spartan existence.) Each owner should
make there own rules and teach them to the dog. That specific rules and
regulations will vary considerably between households is of little concern; what
is important though, is that the dog has been taught the relevant rules and the
owner is always in control. We allow our dogs to enjoy many activities. Our
philosophy is to allow our dogs a lot of comforts and a lot of freedom, but with
lots and LOTS of rules.
Personally I allow my dogs to do all the things listed in the first
paragraph. Nonetheless, in an endeavor to make our dogs as trustworthy as
possible, I always make sure that I am in control. I would never allow the dog
to initiate or engage in most of these activities without my OK and I would
never allow a dog to engage in any activity unless I knew that I could control
the dog with a single command, for example: "Sit", "Shush", "Outside",
"Downstairs", "Off", "Look at your paws" (look away), "Bow" (playbow), and "Say
Hello" (wag your tail), etc. And of course, let's not forget the
Omega-Rollover — "Bang!" i.e., to supinate for a tummy rub for a dog
that is eagerly and happily compliant.
To be in control is the key — to try to understand and respect a dog as a dog
and as much as possible, to meet his needs and establish a mutually enjoyable
household.
This article is based on Dr. Dunbar's Behavior column in the
August 1990 issue of the American Kennel Gazette. Reprinted with the
permission of the author and the American Kennel Club.
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