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behavioral-modification

pjt222
업데이트됨 2 days ago
4 조회
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기타reactai

정보

이 Claude Skill은 반응성, 불안, 자원 보호와 같은 일반적인 강아지 행동 문제를 힘을 사용하지 않는 방법으로 해결하도록 개발자를 지원합니다. 체계적인 탈감작, 역조건 형성, 역치 관리에 관한 지침을 제공합니다. 기본적인 복종 훈련이 확립된 후, 일상 생활에 지장을 주는 문제 행동을 보이는 강아지가 있을 때 사용하세요.

빠른 설치

Claude Code

추천
기본
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
플러그인 명령대체
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git 클론대체
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/behavioral-modification

Claude Code에서 이 명령을 복사하여 붙여넣어 스킬을 설치하세요

문서

Behavioral Modification

Address unwanted dog behaviors through desensitization, counter-conditioning, and environmental management.

When to Use

  • A dog shows reactivity (lunging, barking, growling) toward other dogs, people, or stimuli
  • Separation anxiety manifests as destructive behavior, vocalization, or house soiling when left alone
  • Resource guarding: the dog stiffens, growls, or snaps when approached while eating or holding an object
  • Excessive barking, jumping, pulling on leash, or other behaviors that interfere with daily life
  • After basic obedience is established — behavioral modification builds on foundation commands

Inputs

  • Required: A specific unwanted behavior to address (not "the dog is bad" but "the dog lunges at other dogs on leash")
  • Required: The dog's threshold distance or trigger level (how close/intense before the behavior starts)
  • Optional: History of the behavior (when it started, what triggers it, what makes it worse)
  • Optional: High-value treats that the dog will eat even when mildly stressed
  • Optional: Veterinary clearance (rule out pain or medical causes for behavior changes)

Procedure

Step 1: Identify and Define the Behavior

Precision matters — vague descriptions lead to vague interventions.

Behavior Analysis (ABC Model):
+-------------+------------------------------------------+
| Component   | Define Specifically                      |
+-------------+------------------------------------------+
| Antecedent  | What happens BEFORE the behavior?        |
| (Trigger)   | e.g., "sees another dog within 30 feet"  |
+-------------+------------------------------------------+
| Behavior    | What EXACTLY does the dog do?             |
|             | e.g., "stiffens, stares, then lunges and |
|             | barks"                                   |
+-------------+------------------------------------------+
| Consequence | What happens AFTER the behavior?          |
|             | e.g., "owner pulls the dog away; the     |
|             | other dog leaves" (behavior is reinforced |
|             | because the trigger goes away)           |
+-------------+------------------------------------------+

Threshold Mapping:
- At what distance/intensity does the dog first notice the trigger? (alert)
- At what distance/intensity does the dog become unable to take treats? (over threshold)
- The working zone is BELOW threshold — where the dog notices but can still think

Got: A precise behavior definition with identified trigger, threshold distance, and current consequence pattern.

If fail: If the behavior seems to have no consistent trigger, keep a log for one week: date, time, context, behavior, consequence. Patterns often emerge that are not obvious in the moment.

Step 2: Choose the Intervention Strategy

Strategy Selection:
+----------------------------+-----------------------------------+-----------------+
| Behavior                   | Primary Strategy                  | Timeline        |
+----------------------------+-----------------------------------+-----------------+
| Reactivity (dogs/people)   | Desensitization + counter-        | 4-12 weeks      |
|                            | conditioning (DS/CC)              |                 |
+----------------------------+-----------------------------------+-----------------+
| Separation anxiety         | Graduated absence protocol +      | 6-16 weeks      |
|                            | management                        |                 |
+----------------------------+-----------------------------------+-----------------+
| Resource guarding          | Trade-up protocol +               | 4-8 weeks       |
|                            | approach desensitization          |                 |
+----------------------------+-----------------------------------+-----------------+
| Excessive barking          | Identify function → teach         | 2-6 weeks       |
|                            | alternative behavior              |                 |
+----------------------------+-----------------------------------+-----------------+
| Leash pulling              | Penalty yards (stop when          | 2-4 weeks       |
|                            | pulling) + reward position        |                 |
+----------------------------+-----------------------------------+-----------------+

Got: A specific strategy selected for the identified behavior.

If fail: If the behavior is severe (biting with contact, extreme panic, self-harm), refer to a certified applied animal behaviorist (CAAB) or veterinary behaviorist (DACVB). This skill covers moderate behavioral issues, not clinical cases.

Step 3: Execute Desensitization and Counter-Conditioning

The core protocol for reactivity and fear-based behaviors.

DS/CC Protocol:
1. FIND the threshold: position the dog where the trigger is visible
   but the dog is still calm enough to eat treats

2. MARK and TREAT: trigger appears → mark → treat → treat → treat
   (classical conditioning: trigger predicts good things)

3. CRITERIA: the dog should be:
   - Able to eat treats
   - Ears relaxed or neutral (not pinned forward)
   - Loose body posture
   - Able to look at the trigger and then look back at the handler

4. DECREASE DISTANCE gradually:
   Session 1: 50 feet from trigger
   Session 3: 45 feet
   Session 5: 40 feet
   (Only decrease when the dog is consistently relaxed at current distance)

5. SESSION STRUCTURE:
   - 5-15 minutes maximum
   - 3-5 trigger exposures per session
   - End BEFORE the dog goes over threshold
   - If the dog goes over threshold, increase distance immediately
     and end on a calmer note

6. PROGRESS INDICATORS:
   - Dog looks at trigger, then immediately looks at handler ("check-in")
   - Dog's threshold distance decreases over sessions
   - Recovery time after exposure shortens
   - Dog's body language at threshold becomes more relaxed

Got: Over weeks, the dog's threshold distance decreases and emotional response to the trigger shifts from fear/aggression to neutral or positive.

If fail: If no progress after 3-4 weeks of consistent sessions, reassess: (1) are you working below threshold? (2) are the treats high-value enough? (3) is the trigger exposure too frequent outside of training (flooding undoes DS/CC)? (4) consider consulting a professional.

Step 4: Manage the Environment

Training changes behavior over time. Management prevents rehearsal now.

Management Strategies:
+----------------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Behavior                   | Management During Training Period        |
+----------------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Dog reactivity             | Walk at off-peak hours; cross the street |
|                            | when another dog approaches; use visual  |
|                            | barriers (parked cars, bushes)           |
+----------------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Separation anxiety         | Do not leave the dog alone beyond their  |
|                            | current tolerance; use daycare, pet      |
|                            | sitter, or take the dog with you         |
+----------------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Resource guarding          | Do not approach while eating; trade up   |
|                            | from a distance; manage access to        |
|                            | high-value items                         |
+----------------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Excessive barking          | Block visual triggers (frosted window    |
|                            | film); provide enrichment; address       |
|                            | underlying cause (boredom, anxiety)      |
+----------------------------+------------------------------------------+

Every rehearsal of the unwanted behavior strengthens it.
Management prevents rehearsal while training builds the new response.

Got: The unwanted behavior is not being practiced outside of controlled training sessions.

If fail: If management is impossible (e.g., cannot avoid all dog encounters), reduce training criteria to match reality. Some environmental exposure is unavoidable; ensure training sessions provide a strong enough counter-experience.

Validation

  • The behavior was defined precisely using the ABC model
  • Threshold distance was identified before starting DS/CC
  • Training was conducted consistently below threshold
  • Treats were high-value enough for the dog to eat in the presence of the trigger
  • Sessions were 5-15 minutes, ending before the dog went over threshold
  • Environmental management prevented behavior rehearsal outside training
  • Progress indicators (check-ins, reduced threshold distance) are being tracked

Pitfalls

  • Working over threshold: The single most common error. If the dog cannot eat treats, you are too close. Move back
  • Inconsistency: DS/CC requires regular sessions (3-5 per week minimum). Sporadic training produces sporadic results
  • Flooding: Forcing the dog to endure the trigger at close range does not "get them used to it" — it traumatizes and worsens the behavior
  • Punishment: Correcting a reactive dog (leash pop, yelling "no") suppresses the warning signals but increases the underlying emotion. The dog learns to bite without warning
  • Expecting linear progress: Behavioral modification has plateaus and regressions. A bad session does not erase prior progress. Zoom out and look at the trend over weeks
  • Ignoring medical causes: Pain, thyroid disorders, and neurological issues can all present as behavioral problems. Veterinary clearance is not optional for sudden-onset behavior changes

Related Skills

  • basic-obedience — foundation commands that behavioral modification builds upon; reliable recall is essential for safety

GitHub 저장소

pjt222/agent-almanac
경로: i18n/caveman-lite/skills/behavioral-modification
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

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