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How do you help your dog continue to express him/herself with useful barks, understand your dog's needs behind the barks, and stop your dog from building a pattern of excessive barking?
It starts with understanding what all the barking is about and learning to think like your dog.
Our expectation is that dogs will be quiet in our human world but that doesn't always fit with reality. Every dog barks, it's one way our dogs communicate.
Who doesn't know the feeling of being in the middle of an important conference call and all of a sudden (or so it seems) your dog is barking excessively in the background?
What often happens in the moment with what is likely an attention or demand bark is - the dog barks, the dog parent either shushes the dog to be quiet or tosses a treat or toy, then the dog barks again, and the dog parent responds again. So the dog now knows, I bark, the human responds, it works! An endless cycle.
If you speak back at your dog, or give your dog any attention, even looking at your dog, then you've just reinforced the bark, and created a cycle of learned barking, or demand barking, which is an attention-seeking behavior. (If you know your dog, the barking in this example of the conference call probably didn't happen out of nowhere. Knowing your dog and understanding barks helps you anticipate, so you could have given your dog an engaging food-stuffed chew toy or other enrichment in advance and averted the bark cycle.)
Some dogs are quiet naturally, while others will have full-fledged conversations with you, and on occasion or often, many dogs bark excessively. Whatever barking inclinations your dog is showing at any point in time, every bark indicates your dog's emotions...
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Every dog bark depends on your dog's emotional response to the situation and context. Sadly, many dogs get unnecessarily reprimanded or punished for barking, when all they're trying to do is communicate their emotions.
Let's take a look at a few common types of barking and the steps you can take to help...
The tried and true way to help dogs who are fearful to learn not to be fearful is through systematic desensitization and counter-conditioning, a gradual step-by-step method.
The goal is to help your fearful dog not be afraid of whatever is causing his or her fear. Your training sessions needs to be at a distance from the scary thing and where your dog feels comfortable. Then step by step moving your dog closer or increasing the intensity of the stimulus your pup fears.
For example, on a walk after your dog has reacted with a barking response, the stress is at a higher starting level when your dog sees the next bike, dog, or other trigger, often known as trigger stacking. (Often, the best thing to do is to call it a day after your dog has a major barking reaction and give your dog a decompression break with treats and relaxation at home and not let the compulsive barking cycle take root and grow.)
Working with your dog on desensitization and counter-conditioning takes time, so meanwhile, to set your dog up for success you'll want to use management to eliminate or reduce triggers to prevent your dog from practicing the fear barking and having it reinforced with each incident.
Try this
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Fearful dogs need extra support, patience and understanding. It's important to remember your dog could be in a state of fear at any given time and trying to cope with the stress by barking or other behaviors.
It's also important to provide a safe space for your dog where he or she has no triggers and can relax.
1) Get distance - whenever your dog barks or sees another dog barking on a walk you have 3 options: engage-disengage game, magic hand, and high rate of reinforcement, but first, put distance between your dog and the scary thing.
The point about desensitization and counter-conditioning is to create distance from the scary thing where your dog can see/hear the scary thing in a comfort zone while being treated and then gradually, slowly decrease distance, getting closer to scary things as your dog is comfortable (using desensitization and counter-conditioning to change your dog's emotions).
2) High rate of reinforcement - feed your dog rapid-fire treats (don’t forget to MOVE AWAY from the trigger) and then slowly drip feed the treats
3) If you’re at home - your reinforcement could involve doing a treat party away from a window or door.
4) Remember the 4 cues that can be used to help this are - magic hand, treat party, engage-disengage game and rapid-fire treats.
1) Remove your dog from the situation that is causing frustration
2) Teach your dog alternative behaviors (like "touch" which you can learn here if your dog doesn't already know it).
3) Provide your dog with sniffing opportunities to create calmness (a sniffari in your back yard or on a decompression walk or treats hidden in a snuffle mat or grass).
4) Use window film on the windows or some form of barrier on your fence to decrease barrier frustration if that's the trigger.
This barking stems from fear, frustration, excitement or guard barking and is consciously or unconsciously reinforced by the dog's human. It can look and sound something like this: your dog barks, takes a break from barking, looks at or for you, then continues barking. This is your dog looking for reinforcement or attention for barking.
So, what to do? Again, no reprimand - it's counterproductive on every level. Instead teach your dog to replace the barking with another behavior.
This will take time to teach, so be prepared that it will take your dog time to unlearn if currently your dog barks excessively. Remember, even talking is attention when your dog barks since your dog has learned he or she will get attention with barking.
1) Management - don’t leave your dog alone for long periods of time or stand for long periods of time talking to people and ignoring your dog.
2) Start training and identify the trigger event and then train your dog to have a different response than barking using techniques (like "touch," treat scatter, checking in with you, etc) described above.
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Give your dog space! And make sure that space can't be violated by another dog, child, etc.
When your dog is joyfully engaged in play and interacting with a play bark, let your dog be a dog and happy-bark away!
When your dog barks when you're at home to alert you to whatever, give your dog a positive opportunity to disengage so your dog stops barking and focuses on something else.
1) Say "thank you" (after all, in your dog's mind, your dog has gifted you with a thoughtful warning about something you should know about) and put some food in your pup's snuffle mat or on a lick pad or reward in another way that engages your dog.
Note: You are not reinforcing the bark - you are reinforcing the disengagement. You are also not reprimanding your dog for normal dog communication.
Now that you have a good foundation in understanding barking from your dog's perspective and a deeper sense of barking dogs as a natural part of communicating, you can help your dog disengage from barking in a healthy way. And you'll have the added bonus of improving the bond and communication between you and your dog as you work together!
Now that we've discussed the why and what of different types of dog barks, check out the rest of the Barking Channel for full guides dedicated to fear barking, demand barking, alert/alarm barking, and excitement barking, each guide from a force-free, certified professional dog trainer and Dogly Advocate here to help you with any and all of your dog's barking.
If you think your dog's barking might be related to separation anxiety, there are 9 in-depth guides in the Anxiety Channel focusing on the specific, step-by-step plans to address separation anxiety created by separation anxiety specialist and Dogly Advocate Melissa Dallier.
For any questions about your dog's barking, just ask in the discussion here in the Barking Channel.
Or if you ever need more personalized dog training guidance, please reach out!
DISCLAIMER: The content of this website and community is based on the research, expertise, and views of each respective author. Information here is not intended to replace your one-on-one relationship with your veterinarian, but as a sharing of information and knowledge to help arm dog parents to make more informed choices. We encourage you to make health care decisions based on your research and in partnership with your vet. In cases of distress, medical issues, or emergency, always consult your veterinarian.