I heard the same story and thought that I might have a way to make some
money with the too many horses that we own. 

I don't believe that horses "mirror your intentions." I am not even sure
what that means. They do react strongly to non-verbal cues though.
(Could we tie two threads together here with Clever Hans.) Of course
folks that have not worked around horses have no idea what those cues
might be and so have no idea how to control them. The horses' reactions
would provide a nice "Rorschach" for interpretation. 

So now I wonder if there is any research that shows that horses "read"
human body language the way that dogs read the direction of humans'
gaze.

The Science article for findings on dogs can be found here
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/298/5598/1634 
or http://tinyurl.com/5ow6yt 

Dennis  

Dennis M. Goff 
Chair, Department of Psychology
Professor of Psychology
Randolph College (Founded as Randolph-Macon Woman's College in 1891)
Lynchburg VA 24503
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



-----Original Message-----
From: Michael Britt [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2008 10:55 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: [tips] Horse Sense (or nonsense)?

I love horses as much as the next person, but I was listening to a story
on NPR the other day that really made me wince.  It was about how horses
were being used in corporate training.  The trainers basically brought
employees into a barn and gave them a task they had to accomplish with a
horse.  In the example I've excerpted below, two women were asked to get
a
horse to jump over a fence and they didn't know what to do, so the horse
just trotted away.  The trainer then talks about how horses "mirror your
intentions" and the employees then find great meaning in the horse's
actions.  I don't know about you, but this all sounds like unsupported
claims (I'm not familiar with research on horses - do they really
"mirror
your intentions"?) and our tendency to read meaning into whatever
happens.

Maybe I have too much critical thinking on the brain, but take a listen
or
read the transcript below and let me know what you think.  Here's the
link:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=94415776

and here's part of the transcript:

___
"If you think the horse is going to stay there, it's going to stay
there,"
Stockl says. "If you think the horse is going to walk away, it's going
to
walk away. It never fails."
"They mirror you; the horses mirror your intentions, which is
fascinating," Stockl says.
"Because these horses we observe with every group, they always have a
different behavior. They are you at this point."
The horses ran away, she says, because the women hadn't thought through
how to handle the task before they started.
Jan Monks, the head insurance agent, says the exercise has made her
think
about the way she manages people - how she has to be clear about what
she
wants.
It's something she confesses is not always easy to do.
"I can't just expect they're going to intuitively know what I'm
expecting," Monks says.
"It was surprising ... this whole exercise has made me stop and analyze
myself and things that I do in business."
Companies that use equine-assisted learning say horses are so good at
reflecting human behavior, because they can help teach people something
about themselves. And that, they say, can be a useful tool for
understanding the workplace.
___

What do you think?

Michael

-- 
Michael Britt, Ph.D.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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