Not exact matches
Your pup will soon learn that his
behavior makes a good thing go away (this is called «negative punishment,» and involves no
physical correction whatsoever).
If there's a
physical cause for the
behavior, no amount of training or
correction will change it.
Physical correction has no place in changing a cat's
behavior - cats just don't understand it.
A
correction is something you do to stop unwanted
behavior, but that doesn't mean it has to be
physical.
AVSAB does not endorse dominance hierarchy theory or the use of punishment to modify
behavior as this involves the use of adversives, force, coercion, and
physical corrections.
Scolding, a
physical correction, or the use of a remote collar may used to decrease undesirable
behaviors.
I think there is a huge difference between using a verbal
correction (especially if it is followed with a positive thing like praise or treats for ceasing the unwanted
behavior) and other types of mild adversives, and the types of training techniques a dominance trainer might use like fear and intimidation (stare downs) and
physical force (alpha roles and leash pops).
Discipline,
physical correction and shouting will cause your dog to develop avoidance
behaviors.
If you mean some form of verbal or
physical correction, then I'm afraid I don't agree at all — we have strong evidence that this is very likely to make aggression worse in the long run, even if it seems to «work» temporarily by suppressing the unwanted
behavior.