corvus Posted April 30, 2010 Share Posted April 30, 2010 We have a mouse in our house at the moment, and I've been fascinated by the fact that my low drive dog is more interested in catching the mouse than my high drive dog. I came across this article talking about modal theory, which is pretty close to what Panksepp (and Steven Lindsay) talk about as well. It didn't really explain why I'm seeing the pattern I am, but it offered some hints and I thought it was interesting enough to share anyway. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Seita Posted April 30, 2010 Share Posted April 30, 2010 Interesting stuff. Thanks for posting it Corvus. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
newfsie Posted April 30, 2010 Share Posted April 30, 2010 That was very interesting.....book marked now, Thank you Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Staranais Posted April 30, 2010 Share Posted April 30, 2010 It was interesting, although I would have liked to argue with the author about some of it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kavik Posted April 30, 2010 Share Posted April 30, 2010 Very interesting but he contradicts himself a couple of times. By saying that encouraging retrieval as pups will produce dogs with high drive and not encouraging it will produce dogs with lower drive, then saying that dogs with high drive will turn neurotic if not given an outlet for that drive. Though I think I know what he is trying to say (certainly that encouraging it will help if you are after using drive in your training). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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