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Phases in the Training Process Arcon Method

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In this article we will discuss the phases in the training
process arcon method.


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3215 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2008-09-24 11:48:00

Written By:     Jaime Parejo Garcia
Copyright:      2008
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Phases in the Training Process Arcon Method
Copyright (c) 2008 Jaime Parejo Garcia
Canine Rescue
http://www.rescatecanino.com



PHASES IN THE TRAINING PROCESS ARCON METHOD

A) SIGNALLING

1 ) Exposed Chest

2) Concealed Chest

B ) SIMPLE SEARCH (A BURIED PERSON)

1 ) Introductory Rubbish Heap

2) Working Rubbish Heap

C) CHAINED SEARCH

1 ) Two Buried People

2 ) Three or more buried people

A) SIGNALLING (EXPOSED AND CONCEALED CHEST)

The goal of this phase is to condition the dog to emit a bark
towards a non-visible human located underground. The dog must
have previously become accustomed to share play with unknown
people, as well as the act of barking fluently, due to the simple
natural impulse generated by the excited desire to share this
play with a determined object. It should be pointed out that
conditioning the dog to bark at any visible person to play should
be avoided, as the dog might learn to bark to achieve goals in
other situations. I also believe that the bark should not be
conditioned to a prior order, which would generate in the dog a
wrong expectation.

The dog would have previously been subjected to several days of
deprivation of fun activities and exercise. By doing so, we
foster the momentum needed to energise the execution of these
first few guidelines while simultaneously increasing the positive
effect of reinforcement. The extra (stuntman) must be a person
that the dog knows (but not the guide), thus fostering the
initial degree of trust and stimulation needed. From the start,
the dog dissociates from the guide as a possible primary
element-goal. The dog must previously become familiar with the
setting where the chest is placed. We should use whatever
motivator provides the most incentive for the dog (ball, roller,
doll, stick, etc.), clarifying that this should only be used in
the initial stage of learning with the purpose of dog associating
its simple specific smell as the sole discriminatory stimulus it
reacts to by signalling and thus avoid signalling towards the
buried person, who will not have this stimulus. We should avoid
working under adverse weather conditions (high temperatures,
heavy rains, etc.) that could spur negative reactions or
distraction in the dog.

The observers should place themselves at least 15 metres from the
working area and avoid movements, postures or sounds that might
distract the animals behaviour. In this initial phase, the dog
will be especially susceptible to any type of distraction, yet it
is fundamental for it to perform successfully.

For this phase, I feel a special predilection for the use of
chests located on paved surfaces (asphalt, concrete, etc.) with
no traffic. Obviously, with pavement we substantially minimise
the potential presence of interfering olfactory stimulants, which
nevertheless would be inherent in what we call the terrain. We
should remove any object or material from the surface that
hypothetically might erroneously draw the dogs attention (tools,
clothing, excrement, etc.). At first a hard wood or plastic lid
should be used, as they are more manageable and durable (with a
handle in the middle). The dog should first be left in a zone
away from the working area for a few minutes so that it may
urinate, defecate and relax. This is a general rule in the entire
learning phase. Bare chest: 1st step The guide with the dog on a
leash should head towards a place around 20 metres in front of
the chest (variable according to the motivational state observed
in the animal).

During the walk towards the leash release point, is removed the
guide must emotionally activate the dog, mentally warming it up
for the job. The guide should not repress any possible valuable
impetus shown by the animal by avoiding, for example, the use of
extensible leads or pull backwards on the lead. The extra will be
waiting for the guide halfway between the chest and the release
point. S/he should make movements to incite the dog, showing the
dog the motivator and making voices that truly stimulate it until
achieving a positive effect of attraction on the dog.

When the extra deems that the dog has been provoked to a
sufficient degree of excitability and impetus, s/he will quickly
move towards the chest and will get into the chest, in plain view
of the dog, repeating the stimulation moves before immersing
him/herself fully in the hole and covering him/herself with the
lid. The instructor should carefully observe the dogs behaviour
outside and indicate to the hidden extra (by means of a
transceiver) the right time to reinforce the emission of barking
(even though the extra might hear the dog barking, s/he cannot
know whether the barking is addressed improperly to the guide or
another element, and thus whether or not s/he should stop the
signalling based on the possible state of inhibition or another
aspect in the dog. Thus, technical guidance from the outside is
necessary). The extra should not verbally praise the dog
precisely when s/he is indicated as this might dovetail with a
silent pause. This praise should, to the extent possible, be
simultaneous with the next bark issued in order to thus foster
the required time contiguousness that allows for proper
association and conditioning. Immediately afterwards the lid is
removed and the extra immediately praises the dog by petting it
and encouraging it to draw closer in order to thus heighten its
level of confidence in this strange new situation. Now is when
the guide may approach the dog to praise it and pet it as well.
The extra may come out of the chest in order to share the
euphoria and play with the dog alongside the guide.

The extra should always begin the verbal reinforcement from
inside the hideout, rectifying as much as possible the delay that
there might be between the signalling bark of the dog and the
opening of the chest. The reason why the guide does not verbally
reinforce nor draw close to the dog until the extra has done so
is for the dog to clearly identify the extra(s) as the
goal-element, and thus dissociate the guide with this role and
with that of possible means for getting reinforcement. This is
the main reason why the Arcn method does not include the
possibility of the guide taking on the role of extra, even though
this is quite a widespread practice in the initial phase. Thus we
solidly manage to avoid the risk that in the accident the dog
improperly leaves the localisation point and returns to the guide
occasionally.

Additionally, we preserve the dogs invaluable potential for
autonomy in the search process.

The dog learns to bark at the person hidden under the surface
thanks to its basic mechanism of associative learning.

Exposed chest: 2nd step The release point is kept, but in this
case the dog can make out the chest covered by a lid without the
prior presence of the extra.

Concealed chest: 1st step

 * The lid is partially covered with rubble. The instructor
should control more or less covering when carrying out this next
exercise based on the possible degree of inhibition observed in
the dog before including the new concealed element, until
reaching the point in which the dog signals confidently and
fluently towards a lid that is totally covered in rubble.

 * When the figure and guide reinforce the dog, they should bear
in mind that it is crucial to convey to it the necessary degree
of emotion, imbuing their movements, voice intonations and
petting with the required excitement that will manage to
intensely stimulate the dog.

Concealed chest: 2nd step - The signalling phase will end when
the dog satisfactorily performs this exercise with another chest
that is totally concealed and in a different location. Thus we
should check whether the element rubble has acquired enough
strength as a predictive stimulus for the dog. * The rubble used
with the second chest should be different from that used with the
first one, although obviously they will share similar basic
features that will enable the dog to generalise. * One key factor
to bear in mind when preparing these exercises is to always
predict that the extra must be able to remove the lid covered
with rubble without help. Thus, the weight and position of the
elements lying on top of it must be controlled and the necessary
trials at opening the chest should be held before the exercise. *
With the actions with the concealed chest, all the extras must
wear the appropriate protective helmet and any other safety gear
required. The extra should partially move the lid to give
immediate reinforcement. .

O During the signalling phase, the following techniques should be
applied whenever necessary:

 * Gradual autonomy technique by the mannequin effect

 * Technique of innocuous re-establishment by sound insertion

 * Feasible localisation technique by compensation negative
factors

B) SIMPLE SEARCH (one buried person)

(INTRODUCTORY RUBBLE HEAP AND RUBBLE HEAP TRAINING SITE)
Introductory rubble heap

 * An introductory heap of rubble is that which does not exceed
an approximate surface area of 50m2 and has a moderate height.
The emotional activation factor must be applied in all the search
exercises, as prior stimulus is key during the walk (several
metres) before releasing the dog. The distance from the release
point to the rubble heap should not be more than 25 m. For the
first cover of the hideout, a fragment of board or something
similar should be used, and rubble should be placed over it until
achieving a totally hermetic closure that prevents the dog from
catching any glimpse of the extra (stuntman) or from reaching
him/her.In the burials, you should also try to avoid any possible
distinctive features that might foster in the dog any type of
visual discrimination in the future work areas and their
consequent harmful association. When the extra removes the
closure it might be very harmful for the dog to get any sort of
negative impact from any element in the rubble and thus generate
the consequent negative conditioning in the animal.

This circumstance must be prevented and controlled by means of
prior rehearsals, as mentioned above. The dogs should be in
inside their corresponding transport cages, in the waiting area,
without any possibility of seeing the working area. The extras
(stuntmen) are still people who are familiar to the dog during
the introductory rubble heap phase and the first search in the
rubble heap training site phase in order to continue thereafter
with extras who are total strangers.

The dog should not be allowed to become familiar with the
training site in order to foster the ability to adapt to new
environments. The dog should feel attracted at first by the
simple sight of the rubble heap, which after the concealed chest
phase should have become a powerful predictive stimulus. .

Occasionally it can be seen that when certain dogs perceive the
source of the human scent of the buried person they urinate or
even defecate after the unavoidable relaxation of the sphincters
prompted by the consequent emotional reaction. In some dogs there
is an impairment of their barking ability which they cannot
properly control and that harmfully hinders the fluency of the
barking signal. The sense of frustration or anxiety during the
search may at times be expressed with repeated chewing of blades
of grass or other items. Rubble heap training site

 * The dog that manages to properly localise and signal the
stuntman buried in the introductory rubble heap will then go on
to work in larger areas, called rubble heap training sites.

 * We should gradually push the dog to search further, beginning
with a moderate distance from the release point to the buried
person.

 * Should the motivator be an object whose scent might be
detrimental to the dogs search ability, it should be replaced by
a simple stick or another innocuous item (with no scent), while
striving not to diminish the intensity of the reinforcement. We
thus avoid the future risk of possible avoidance actions when
signalling buried persons.

 * The source of human scent coming out of the rubble now becomes
a powerful predictive stimulus for the dog. * Just like other
species, dogs have the capacity to respond in the same way to
different stimuli that bear certain similarities. For this
reason, it is feasible for them to generalise when faced with any
rubble heap or different human scents.

 * In the rubble heap training site, the distance from the
release point to the location of the buried person should
gradually be increased, as it is the dogs own motivational state
that will drive it to carry out the olfactory search for human
scent molecules that will guide it towards the source emerging
from the rubble, emanating from the buried extra.

 * The instructor should determine:

 * Possible suitability of the rubble area

 * Location of the hideout

 * Position of each dogs relase point .

The dog should get used to searching for buried people by
sniffing. To achieve this, we should gradually try to reduce the
possibility of it using existing traces on the terrain to head
towards the target, and these traces should not be associated
with key localisation signals. Sniffing is the only reliable
procedure for searching for buried people after a cave-in. The
people moving around the rubble area during the set-up when
digging out the hiding place and hiding the extra should adhere
to a pre-set route for entering and leaving this area. The
release point should always be on the opposite side of this
route. Another resource regarded as valid is to riddle the
terrain with multiple traces in a premeditated fashion. Likewise,
I discovered that certain dogs even used the traces left by the
dog that went before them as a resource to guide themselves to
the buried person.

This circumstance can easily be solved by a methodical control of
the dogs turns at searching. Upon noticing that certain dogs
presented symptoms of stress (lack of vigour, inability to
concentrate, increase in salivation, etc.) in their a search
behaviour without any apparent cause, I managed to detect that
the origin lay in the previous capture of pheromones by the male
that had been excreted by some female in heat in another place
and time (aerially, in the urine, etc.).

This state can last up to several weeks, during which the dog
should be withdrawn from any activity that requires psychological
effort.

The hideout should not be used more than once by the same dog,
nor should the rubble heap once the feasible burials have been
done. Under no circumstances should the dog ever be upbraided in
the rubble area, thus avoiding among other consequences the
possibility that this area becomes a conditioning inhibiting
stimulus for the dog, which might even slightly diminish its
possible state of motivation or concentration.

I should point out that even though I am in favour of the dogs
learning by certain direction orders (a relatively simple
operation), I am steadfastly opposed to using these orders during
everyday training, as it could harm the dogs initiative and
autonomy to a greater or lesser degree, as it might harmfully
identify the guide as a possible guiding resource during search
operations and certain situations, thus visibly harming its
required level of concentration.

O The following techniques are applicable in this simple search
phase:

 * Gradual autonomy by the mannequin effect -Techniques of
Innocuous re-establishment by sound insertion .

 * Feasible localization technique by compensation of negative
factors.

 * Support without request by restricted approximation.

C) CHAINED SEARCH (two or more buried persons)

 * We should begin the chained search learning process with only
two buried extras.

 * The respective hideouts should be located in the rubble heap
training site separated by an average distance of 50 metres.

 * Once one of the two extras has been signalled by the dog, the
chained search technique by mimicked dissuasion of the buried
person should be applied, so that as soon as the extra who has
been localised and signalled secondly is the one who reinforces
the dog as described in the simple search. After reinforcing the
dog and then withdrawing, the guide puts on the leash and takes
the dog up to a middle point towards the second buried person,
and releases the dog once again. In this way, we strive to ensure
the dogs success in the second localisation and the consequent
inclusion of this new work scheme in its memory and behavioural
repertoire.

 * The instructor should watch carefully in order to use the
transceiver to warn the extra who should reinforce, as it will be
impossible to fully predict which buried person the dog will
capture and signal first.

 * When it has been confirmed that the dog properly performs the
chained search behaviour with two buried people, a third hideout
and extra should be added, keeping the average distance of 50
metres from the other two.

 * We should continue applying the same basic mechanism, mimicked
dissuasion with the first two extras signalled and the
reinforcement (especially pronounced) in the case of the third
and last extra signalled. Following this pattern, several
different search operations with variable numbers of buried
persons (one, five, six, etc.) should be performed. The extra who
gives the reinforcement should also vary, but always bearing in
mind that the chained search comes to an end for each dog with
the appearance of the main reinforcement (from the guide and
extra).

 * The dog gradually includes this new scheme of chained searches
into its behavioural repertoire, developing the new expectation
of the possible continuity of the search after a variable number
of signalling acts, with the main reinforcement appearing in an
unpredictable fashion. This type of circumstance actually becomes
an added stimulus for the dog.

 * The dog should gradually come to be released from the signal
point itself.

 * Before each search instruction, the dog will always be placed
on the leash with the purpose of its gradually becoming used to
restarting the search without ever having to await the guides
order.

O The following techniques will be applied in this chained search
phase:

 * Gradual autonomy technique by the mannequin effect * Feasible
localisation technique by compensation negative factors

 * Calibrated reinforcement technique by triple control

 * Chained search technique by mimicked dissuasion of the buried
person

When the chained search behaviour is deemed to be consolidated in
the dog, we should gradually subject it to different types of
discriminatory trainings (olfactory, visual, etc.) and have it
carry out searches with the presence of adverse factors
(confinement, noise, etc.).

A moderate process of individualised intensification should
always be applied. Once the initial training process has been
completed, the dog will show an especially solid and effective
level of autonomy, motivation and concentration in the searches.

>From here on out, the following techniques should be applied
constantly:

 * Gradual autonomy technique by the mannequin effect

 * Calibrated reinforcement technique by triple control

 * Chained search technique by mimicked dissuasion of the buried
person.

Approved by Legal Resolution No. 1998/41/12727 on 5 May 1998 by
the Ministry of Education and Culture of Spain, in compliance
with Royal Decree (1/1996, 12 April), that the Arcon Method,
(including among other content, the set of innovative behavioural
techniques, training phases and corresponding denominations),
whose author is Jaime Parejo Garca, is duly registered and
legally protected as scientific copyright in the General Registry
of Intellectual Property under No. 23474.

Jaime Parejo Garcia Researcher in Animal Behaviour and Instructor
specialized in Training Disaster Search and Rescue Dogs. 




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Jaime Parejo is Canine Rescue Expert of the Firefighters of 
Seville, Spain. He is regarded as an internationally renowned 
expert in the speciality of canine catastropherescues. To date, 
he has been given numerous official awards, distinctions and 
congratulations both nationally and internationally from 
different governments and institutions (the Spanish Committee 
of the Mankind Programme and UNESCO's Biosphere, the UNESCO 
Centre in Melilla, the governments of Spain, Colombia, China, 
etc.). Specific examples include the First Prize for Research 
granted by the Spanish Royal Canine Society in 1998, and the 
Sasakawa Certificate of Distinction from the United Nations in 
2005, both entailing worldwide recognition of his transcendent 
international research and teaching efforts as well as the 
scientific advances of the Arcón Method in reducing the number 
of disaster victims. In both case, he was the first Spaniard to 
earn such prominent distinctions.

http://www.rescatecanino.com 

http://www.rescatecanino.org 



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