Train the owner, not the dog | Amrut Dog Guru Hiranya | TEDxDSCE

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  • Опубликовано: 16 июл 2017
  • Amrut Sridhara Hiranya famously known as Dog Guru, is one of the only Dog psychologists and behaviourist from India. He shares his journey of focusing towards his passion more than that of his profession (engineer). Dog Guru, in this talk stresses more upon the the psychology and behaviour of dogs and how one has to love this animal.
    "Train the owner, not the dog", this talk gives us an idea about how to treat dogs!
    People love animals, they are passionate about dogs and pet them.
    Well who doesn't love dogs right? Amrut took his passion for dogs to the next level. He is popularly known as "Dog Guru".
    He is one of the few canine behaviourist and trainer in the country. He is an engineer by profession and canine psychologist by passion. He's the first Indian to be awarded the Australian Dog Whisperer John Richardson Cup for his dog training and behaviour.
    This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at www.ted.com/tedx

Комментарии • 86

  • @gopal1035
    @gopal1035 4 года назад +14

    Trust -> Respect -> Loyalty
    Foundation of not only human and dog relationship, but probably all personal and business relationships.

  • @gauravk7402
    @gauravk7402 3 года назад +10

    Proud of you Amrut Sir, Hemme ya kannadiga.

  • @yogeshgowda490
    @yogeshgowda490 3 года назад +20

    ಕನ್ನಡಿಗ..💛❤️

  • @treborironwolfe978
    @treborironwolfe978 5 лет назад +19

    Thank you, Amrut, for this most insightful presentation -- you are more than a "dog guru", you are also a wise and compassionate ambassador representing both species.

  • @dogodivaamorfati7190
    @dogodivaamorfati7190 5 лет назад +22

    Great advice. This is how I approach relationships with dogs and training.

  • @hippiebits2071
    @hippiebits2071 2 года назад +3

    It's awesome to hear of the wonderful, supportive family this man has...very fortunate indeed.

  • @LorraineHatrix
    @LorraineHatrix 6 лет назад +22

    Thank you, I have learned from you Sir.......... You as well as dogs have our respect..

  • @martincassels7995
    @martincassels7995 2 года назад +4

    I wish everybody was like him, not consumed by self! Such wisdom!! Hope you, your family and your dogs are well in these trying times!

  • @janetrains83
    @janetrains83 5 лет назад +28

    There is a big difference in being an emotional leader for your dog based on what he needs versus being a leader based on an ego's perspective of what so called leadership is.

  • @PawsuasiveDogTeaching
    @PawsuasiveDogTeaching 5 лет назад +40

    I find it harder to get through to owners of dogs at times. They just do not get it sometimes that I can teach your dog to do amazing things, but if you do not practice at home it is almost pointless. Plus I do not understand why you would not want to teach your dogs new things. When you teach your dog things you create a very special bond.

    • @zemtek420
      @zemtek420 5 лет назад +7

      More you practice the better.

    • @tulipsontheorgan
      @tulipsontheorgan Год назад +2

      My (late) dog knew so many tricks. We made teaching fun and short. She loved it. Lots of praise we she made effort. Then …when it came to a training session she knew what was going on. Let me lure her, with rewards.

    • @PawsuasiveDogTeaching
      @PawsuasiveDogTeaching Год назад +2

      @@tulipsontheorgan that is awesome. My last dog knew over 60 tricks and my current dog Ruby Doo already knows well over 60 tricks. Its very important to keep the teaching fun. Which is actually my catch phrase in our youtube videos. Hope you will check us out.

    • @missgreen9106
      @missgreen9106 Год назад +1

      @@PawsuasiveDogTeaching I just got a rescue what advise do you have?

    • @PawsuasiveDogTeaching
      @PawsuasiveDogTeaching Год назад +1

      @@missgreen9106 The more you teach your dog the better. Even simple things help a lot.

  • @shubhyankarsharma3545
    @shubhyankarsharma3545 Год назад +1

    Very informative, thank you very much sir🙏

  • @s0ngsterr
    @s0ngsterr 6 лет назад +6

    change in perspective...great talk Amrut...

  • @ranjit_mahal
    @ranjit_mahal 6 лет назад +10

    A very informative video sir. Really helpful for all dog enthusiasts like me.

  • @theonlinedogtrainerreview5747
    @theonlinedogtrainerreview5747 4 года назад +3

    I really enjoy the information you provide and thank you for the continued videos

  • @soumik121
    @soumik121 6 лет назад +3

    Dedicated for a wonderful cause.

  • @tash2166
    @tash2166 4 года назад +3

    So fascinating. Made sense.thank you!

  • @simonedulcie3853
    @simonedulcie3853 Год назад

    Thank you so much, for such an informative, insightful and kind talk. You seem like such a beautiful person! Thanks for sharing your information! ❤😄🌞

  • @scrubssaga
    @scrubssaga 6 лет назад +4

    Great video

  • @mabelheinzle8758
    @mabelheinzle8758 3 года назад +1

    Lovely human ❤️

  • @gwangseopshin
    @gwangseopshin 2 года назад

    Thank you for your existence

  • @rodleach527
    @rodleach527 3 года назад +1

    Very helpful to remind us it is the owner not the dog.

  • @TS-wf2rn
    @TS-wf2rn 5 лет назад +7

    That dog is sooo cute/beautiful

  • @phil4977
    @phil4977 Год назад

    Totally agree with this gentleman

  • @dilsere1775
    @dilsere1775 Год назад

    Very informative video.. Thank you so much sir... I have learned a lot from you😌🙏🏻

  • @Matsutake_Girl
    @Matsutake_Girl 2 года назад

    Wow the dog is so obedient. ❤️

  • @analarson2920
    @analarson2920 6 лет назад +7

    Humans like creatures have inabilities, we must take them embrace them and make them our greatest abilities. It is a path for us to venture and share in.

  • @krysramcharan8059
    @krysramcharan8059 4 года назад +2

    Gotta our that pup on a mark and distraction train her....no good letting her break the stay consistently,no matter what is going on. Clearly a well-trained (albeit nervous,normal for the breed) dog....and a great TED talk :)

  • @sikhswim
    @sikhswim 3 года назад +1

    Good job

  • @saurabharya9152
    @saurabharya9152 3 года назад +6

    Cesar milan's modified quote 😂😂

  • @gowthamipriya4245
    @gowthamipriya4245 3 года назад +1

    Sir my request to you write your own books on dog behaviour and psycology..

  • @kirankumarkkgowda7532
    @kirankumarkkgowda7532 4 года назад +2

    Good trainer

  • @spottyda1615
    @spottyda1615 10 месяцев назад

    Love from rottweiler family

  • @alessandrovaldinoci3599
    @alessandrovaldinoci3599 2 года назад +2

    Is he cesar milan?

  • @bablurao4103
    @bablurao4103 5 лет назад +1

    Of the chain all dogs training center this is my training fb page

  • @saramations
    @saramations 4 года назад +7

    man, this seems like a decent talk but i struggle with understanding accents. ; _;7

  • @satishsdm5901
    @satishsdm5901 2 года назад +2

    Kannada

  • @ummbarakahak2468
    @ummbarakahak2468 4 года назад +1

    Cesar millan..just where are u....

  • @keith2964
    @keith2964 5 лет назад +2

    Did he just say he was a Microsoft Certified Tekneeeshin???

  • @bablurao4103
    @bablurao4103 5 лет назад +1

    Bhai tum Sachin sir mil lo

  • @luna-xl1xx
    @luna-xl1xx 5 лет назад +3

    OMG, this man can talk fast, he is making me nervous to be honest, for the rest it's like I hear cm talking

    • @anjaoguegbu574
      @anjaoguegbu574 5 лет назад

      Thank you...you name it...he got no idea, what he is talking about...all this leader of the pack bs...dogs are no wolves and a group of dogs is not a pack...he should inform himself about what is proven by scientific...this guy is 10 years behind the moon...unfortunately people will now do as he advises ...

    • @tash2166
      @tash2166 4 года назад +1

      Thats because your a cat lover lol

    • @xyzsame4081
      @xyzsame4081 3 года назад

      @@anjaoguegbu574 Yes, dogs are still social animals and still have the instincts to make them fit to live in a hierarchial group. In the rich countries you do not have groups of stray dogs, but they can be around in developping counties - and yes there will be a lead dog. (these stray dog packs can be a danger, at least for other pets and children).
      Same is true when you have more than one dog in the house, sometimes the hierarchy (and competition for dominance) is subtle, but sometimes it is very obvious.
      I have a friend who had a Husky/German Shepherd mix. A female: a well trained, dominant, intelligent, strong willed dog. Later they got a male puppy. Well the husky mix was well trained - and she trained the puppy in turn, human dog parents did not have to train the younger dog at all. Being home broke, or anything else - the husky took care of it.
      He was not allowed to eat when she ate her food, he had to wait until she was finished and then he was allowed in the corner, let alone touching his food. (the dog parents let the dynamic between te dogs play out, not that they could have interevened, and they wisely did not even try).
      - that is typical alpha wolf behavior. Not all dogs will be that much into canine etiquette. But she wanted to establish dominance, and he never challenged her, not even when grown up. (she was slighly larger, but likely stronger. Certainly more intelligent and much more dominant. He was not as smart and more the happy go lucky type. - The two dogs got along well - he just had to keep to the protocol.
      Now if the second dog would also have been a dominant, equally strong dog, things would have gotten "interesting".
      As for the humans - the hierarchy was well established.
      The lady of the house was alpha 1, her then boyfriend was the other dog parent and alpha 2. Then the two dogs.
      Once the man raised his voice when the couple had a quarrel. Dog (husky) heard that and started to growl at him (so the number 3 in the household sided with number 1 against number 2).
      That snapped the couple out of their spat, they started laughing.
      Lesson: parents do not fight in front of the children and the same applies to dog parents !

  • @feyolopez4712
    @feyolopez4712 2 года назад +2

    Cesar Millan is the best when it comes to training humans.

    • @saphira5616
      @saphira5616 2 года назад +2

      He is abusive towards dogs :/

  • @akash4043
    @akash4043 5 лет назад +5

    Knock off cesar milan

    • @amalrafeeq7892
      @amalrafeeq7892 4 года назад

      With a little bit of added narcism?

    • @TheGodFahader
      @TheGodFahader 3 года назад +2

      You guys mad that an Indian made it and it was neither of you?

  • @prakashnair6995
    @prakashnair6995 5 лет назад +1

    Sir you told no touch, no talking, no eye contact these three principles followed by all animals, tell us sir why these is not done if we do these things what will happen, i know let the other also know. some times dogs don't show sign of aggression find it when.

    • @prakashnair6995
      @prakashnair6995 5 лет назад +1

      Sometimes dogs don't show sign of aggression but they bite us

    • @prakashnair6995
      @prakashnair6995 5 лет назад

      Not only male are pack leaders sometimes female also is pack leader and she cantrols the pack but what makes male more pack leader is there height &weight. About stray, stray dont make noise when they saw other dogs they just scare orher dogs whose energy is low, dogs howls to bring pack together, but when thet saw each other they stop howling and bark on other is called i am here then they start walking, in midnight they start barking in different voice means hunting or indicate its danger situation first learn then teach new Zealand dogs are not different same like Indias only getting certified is because of money dogs dont need certified trainer or behaviorist they need a strong pack leader like there mother

    • @briseboy
      @briseboy 5 лет назад

      @@prakashnair6995 Their signs may be somewhat subtle - posture, tenseness. They are like our own in some cases, while differing in others.
      Even a snap, or "air bite" I call it, is defensive. Insufficiently socialized dogs may actually bite without overt warning or escalation. They may, like any other animal including ourselves, be aroused to discomfort by too direct , too quick, or other insufficiently attentive approach.
      Being overly defensive is not the same as actual aggression.

    • @PlumbTuckeredOut
      @PlumbTuckeredOut 5 лет назад

      @@briseboy Dogs that bite without warning have been punished for growling or showing discontentment. It is not possible to make one dog "like" another dog. Let your talk communicate with the other, "Get away" is a sigal first made with the eyes, then a low growl, then a snap. If any step has been punished the dog will skip it and bite without warning. When a dog is doing his "thing" he is always communicating with the dogs around him. Imagine if we were talking with other humans and our dogs said, "Don't use that sound!". Supposedly the smarter species, we make the dogs learn our language instead of being smarter and learning his.

  • @manojkumar-ir1iq
    @manojkumar-ir1iq 5 лет назад +5

    he too costly for his service...

  • @maryistulsafox
    @maryistulsafox 6 лет назад +4

    How many treats in his pockets?

    • @MyCrystalPlaid
      @MyCrystalPlaid 5 лет назад +2

      Like a clown car or Baucis' pitcher - his pockets hold a never-ending supply. ;)

  • @sudarshanrchakravarthi7420
    @sudarshanrchakravarthi7420 4 года назад +3

    He said before you buy a dog!!
    Why not adopt a dog ?
    What's with acquiring symbols and humans ...

  • @bablurao4103
    @bablurao4103 5 лет назад +1

    Bhai English me bhat kr ne sa training nhi hotha hai kam kr ne sa hotha hai ....Ok bro

  • @bablurao4103
    @bablurao4103 5 лет назад +1

    Bhai kabhi hindi me bhi bol do kyu ke indin ke Kai loga ko English nhi aatha hai ager aarha bhi hai tho ous log ko accha sa smj nhi aatha hai

    • @manjunath7497
      @manjunath7497 3 года назад

      Most of the Indians do know English

  • @adventureswithfrodo2721
    @adventureswithfrodo2721 5 лет назад +3

    Love your dog bite it when it misbehave. This guy just be self professed guru...... he has no clue. Grew up trying field train dogs you tell them to stay they stay.

  • @vidyatodankar4660
    @vidyatodankar4660 3 года назад +2

    He threw treats to the dog so disrespectfully

  • @shouryateja
    @shouryateja 3 года назад +3

    He's not a good trainer. And the way he was throwing and kicking treats shows how he treats his dogs. Imagine what happens behind closed door. Truly disappointed by who we call dog guru. And then there are trainers like Shirin Merchant who don't get the attention and following they deserve.
    And don't even get me started on how he speaks. Absolutely atrocious and confusing. He jumps faster than a rabbit with his words and topic.

    • @SharonLowen1
      @SharonLowen1 Год назад

      The fact that he was nervous, unused to public speaking and the TedX format is perfectly understandable for any listener who has a fraction of the compassion he feels for dogs and then trained to become expert formally. I suppose you also have no respect for Pres Biden because he is a stutterer.

  • @floricavasiliu8811
    @floricavasiliu8811 5 лет назад +4

    Very difficult to listen to this. He jumps from one thing to another very quickly. Obviously not prepared just off the cuff. Unprofessional speaker. His intentions are good though.

    • @briseboy
      @briseboy 5 лет назад +5

      Humans, as individuals and within groups, from dyad to vast cultures, differ.
      1. English may not be the speaker's first language, although , due to India's experience for the last couple hundred years DID include bilingual education including English - often taught not by native English speakers, but falling into rhythms and concepts occurring in the native culture of the part of India in which he was raised. (I believe there are more than 40-odd languages and dialects spoken there). This series occurs in Bangalore, which culture may well be a world distant from Eastern Europe.
      2. The speaker may himself have been diagnosable should he have been a member of our regimented society, as ADD or ADHD (both terms remain in use). He is also visibly less than perfectly comfortable addressing his (particular?) audience. to those who themselves have little experience, understanding, or tolerance of variation, he would certainly elicit some sort of avoidant or "offput" response.
      3. He is not, then operating at his optimum stress level. I say this because the likely time constraints common to TED speeches caused him to fail to preferentially attend to the strong signals /communications given to him by his dog. As one who has researched the Gray Wolf, from which humans selected neotenic dogs, I can tell you that postural, gestural, vocal, and even invisible pheromonal and hormonal signals occur that pass by humans fast as bullets, completely unseen or if detected, disregarded because so quickly passed.
      4. thus, although a dog is a wolf unable to grow up - to achieve autonomy, the deepest adaptive driver, it can still learn the sociality for which both species are hard-wired. The variable physical and attentional traits humans have selected for, are addressed well, although attempting to translate the massively multivariate subjecct may APPEAR to the uninitiated to be "off the cuff", when in reality it is of necessity a matteer of contingent choice, partly based upon someof the traits I mentioned so far. I happen to have been personally pleased that I could finally listeen to the presentation at "normal" speed, rather than the usual 1.25 to 1.5 option. I've tried to explain the signaling content given to their bonded human by a single young dog, in verbal concept - words; but the difference in speed is so large that I can never cover the signals given in 15 seconds or 1/ minute in less than about 5 to 10 minutes.
      This is how slowly humans operate. Only by attending to actual sensory signals and communications, can a human catch up to dog speed.
      Yo will notice that the speaker is an Engineer, and very obviously frames his presentation in a utilitarian manner. He desires to create understanding and greater affiliative feelinng for dogs in a culture that includes many straay and abused dogs.
      I hear brilliance in his implications, although I may disagree about the breeding and use of domestics .
      As a dog ages, he or she also does develop toward some autonomy, although never to the natural level of the wolf, which must in nature be precocial, rather than altricial.
      Humans and dogs and wolves are obligate social animals - the ridiculous falsehood about "lone wolf" is so far from reality as to be utter fiction. Canids always seek mate and group life, just as do you. Humans, though, veer toward the eusocial to a far greater extent than all other mammals save one (Heterocephalus glaber). This means that humans of this era have been bred to be dominant/submissive, and to a great extent mistake other species as acting in ways reflecting ourselves and not their real selves.
      The statement about "packs" misrepresent wolves as being so, when in fact they are only hierarchically structured by parents - the sole true adults. (with humans, as you see in politics, the situation can be quite the reverse!)
      The emphasis upon selection of behaviors and signals for those that benefit affiliation ("loyalty"), is the most important understanding that this brilliant "dog whisperer" trainer, Amrut Hiranya, intends and succeeds at communicating.
      If a dog feels comfortable, he or she will approach you; yet without that attention and respect for this other, you may offend, through signaling undeserved dominance, which, of course, is threat.
      Attention is everything in life, and our species far too often fails in attentive capacity. The pull of communicating to audience who, in aggregate, can affect both the interspecies sociality of humans and dogs, and the former's tolerance,, is necessary, as we are among the most vengeful species of all.
      Dogs, on the other hand, are eternally eager to function affiliatively, always most comfortable when their social world is well settled. Insistence and even dispute are cognitive, in that familiar or proper behaviors appropriate to the situation. They learn quite quickly, as Amrut says. But they also do, rightly, expect to be "listened to."

  • @zofiaswierzewska8218
    @zofiaswierzewska8218 2 года назад +1

    This dog is so stressed I just couldn’t watch it. I saw almost 3 minutes and I don’t agree with what I’ve heard (and seen). This dog don’t scratch herself because she doesn’t know what to do, she is scratching because she’s stressed! Scratching is a behavior in the stress ethogram. Also yawning and panting. Her whole body screams “I don’t want to be here!”. Dog guru, no thank you.

  • @cogitoergosum8337
    @cogitoergosum8337 5 лет назад +1

    Dog Guru? What a joke?

  • @attheranch873
    @attheranch873 5 лет назад +6

    He’s copying Cesar Milan, but his accent is hard to understand. It’s embarrassing to watch him copy Cesar 😬😜🤭🤭🤭😰

    • @Floridafanatic28
      @Floridafanatic28 5 лет назад +17

      You are misinformed. He is NOT copying Cesar, the things he is saying is a widely used technique in modern dog training. Cesar didn't invent it, he just brought it mainstream.

    • @sophiepires792
      @sophiepires792 5 лет назад +2

      Plus, he went to a university to train.

    • @PlumbTuckeredOut
      @PlumbTuckeredOut 5 лет назад +5

      He is the opposite of Milan. There is no "correction". You wait for the dog to do what you requested and then you reward. Forcing a dog to do what you want isn't healthy for the human or the dog. Respect the dog and they will respect you. It's a partnership and not a dictatorship.