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Manage episode 522301061 series 3319460
Content provided by Stacy Barnett, Robin Greubel, Crystal Wing, Stacy Barnett, Robin Greubel, and Crystal Wing. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Stacy Barnett, Robin Greubel, Crystal Wing, Stacy Barnett, Robin Greubel, and Crystal Wing or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

What to listen for:

Our hosts Robin Greubel and Stacy Barnett explore generalization as the foundation of reliable detection work.

Together, they reveal generalization as extending far beyond simple obedience across locations. It encompasses odor variability, environmental context, behavioral chains, and handler presentation.

They explain how explosive and narcotic sources vary like chocolate-cake recipes: different manufacturers, cutting agents, and absorption materials create distinct odor profiles.

Dogs trained on limited sources may fail to recognize the "same" target odor prepared differently. That’s why handlers must expose dogs to diverse training aids and seek out other teams' materials.

Next, they talk behavioral generalization. Does "search" mean the same thing in a familiar training field versus a novel parking lot, rubble pile, or aircraft? Robin and Stacy stress that context cues (vehicles, wilderness, buildings) and environmental distractions require deliberate proofing so dogs maintain focus regardless of setting, weather, or ambient noise.

Robin describes her area-search class methodology, which emphasizes that handlers can proof refind behaviors solo by generalizing the chain across handler positions. You could even do jumping jacks or lie turtle-like after falling into a hole.

The goal is stimulus control, which means the cue triggers the behavior everywhere, every time.

Our hosts warn against training disengagement by repeatedly working in overly distracting environments (woods full of "trail mix") without first building a clean chain in controlled settings like big-box stores with clean floors.

If dogs routinely self-employ or search lackadaisically, handlers must assess whether hides exceed the dog's skill level, reinforcement is insufficient, or engagement was never properly conditioned.

Their green-eggs-and-ham framework captures the essence of generalization: master the skill (row your boat), then generalize it everywhere (here, there, everywhere).


Key Topics:

  • Odor Generalization Across Sources and Absorption Materials (01:41)
  • Training-Aid Availability and Pairing New Sources (04:56)
  • Directionals and Platform Generalization (FEMA, Rubble Piles) (12:40)
  • Training for Test vs. Application (Go-Outs, Distance, Body Language) (16:51)
  • Area Search, Refind/TFR and Robin's New Class (18:50)
  • Search Cue Stimulus Control in Blank and Novel Areas (20:45)
  • Context Cues, Vehicles, and High-Likelihood Targets (23:38)
  • Distraction Management and Clean Behavior Chains (37:45)
  • Green Eggs and Ham: Progression Plans for Young Dogs (42:56)

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153 episodes