The animal training book Don’t Shoot the Dog states that reinforcement-oriented clicker training is substantially faster and more persistent than aversion-based alternatives.
Oh, of course. Positive reinforcement in general is stronger, which I would have noticed if I hadn’t been primed by reading about anxiety recently, which suggests I should institute some sort of debiasing exercise when I recognize the risk of selection bias rather than just announcing it.
Oh, of course. Positive reinforcement in general is stronger, which I would have noticed if I hadn’t been primed by reading about anxiety recently, which suggests I should institute some sort of debiasing exercise when I recognize the risk of selection bias rather than just announcing it.