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Equine Learning Patterns
The behavior and learning patterns of a horse play a major
role in the training process. These patterns are established by instincts,
genetic makeup, and environment. We are not in total control of these
patterns but we can to some degree help or hinder the direction they go in.
These patterns are set at an early age but I believe that we can affect how
the patterns develop if we are aware of what they are and how we can use
them in our daily training. Your training program should be flexible enough
that you can customize it for each individual horse.
A horse’s behavior patterns are based on the horse's natural instincts for
survival and his ability to process information. Things like physical or
mental trauma, chronic hunger or neglect can seriously affect a horse’s
behavior patterns. A horse is a prey animal that uses flight as its primary
survival mechanism, so horses are defensive by nature. The horse’s lack of
desire for confrontation tells us that he does not deal well with stress. He
would rather run now and think later.
Learning patterns are established through the environment a horse lives in.
This is where the quality and quantity of handling or training early in life
will directly affect how much a horse learns later on. The herd establishes
these learning patterns initially, and it is continually developing as a
horse matures. When we train a horse we can use the patterns that have been
established. By understanding what motivates a horse to act the way he does
we can change that behavior by motivating them in different ways.
Horses are motivated by fear and by comfort. There are other things like
food and libido that do motivate some horses but they are not motivators
that we can use effectively in an average training program. I will classify
fear as a negative motivator and comfort as a positive motivator. Horses as
individuals respond to these motivators in different ways. Negative
motivators can gain positive results just as positive motivators can achieve
negative results. This is where a horse’s individual genetic makeup and his
personality are uncontrollable factors.
We can encourage the horse’s decision making ability by employing the
horse’s motivating factors as stimulus and noting his response. We can
either encourage or discourage his response based on what we want him to
learn.
As a prey animal a horse is always aware of potential danger and, given a
choice, will remove itself from a fearful situation. Many domestic horses do
not have that choice as a viable option. If a horse has no way to deal with
fear they learn less effectively because they are sincerely afraid and
nothing learns well under that kind of stress. Horses that form a fear based
learning pattern will be more reactive and often become over achievers. They
learn not because they feel good but because they are afraid of what might
happen to them if they do not perform. They are essentially working under
duress.
A horse that has comfort as a motivator will often be more confident, and
more deliberate in him movements. If there is always a reward when they try
to perform a horse will continue to try. When the horse is motivated to try
it is only a matter of time until he performs correctly because he has been
encouraged to feel good about what he is doing.
A horse’s ability to make a decision is often over ridden by his instinct to
react first and think second. The more afraid a horse becomes the less
capable he is of making a decision about how best to deal with the situation
he finds himself in. The decision making process needs to be developed as it
is not a tool that horses rely on to keep them alive. It is often a
secondary response that if developed it can bypass their survival instincts
and allow them to process information presented to them. The horse can then
decide to do what we ask or he can decide not to. If the horse is
consistently wrong even though he is thinking about what we want then we are
not giving him enough information to come up with the right decision.
Although horses do think and make decisions they think linearly. Once they
get a thought in their head you need to change the stimulus to get a
different thought. A horse always thinks he is right. If he is incorrect
based on what you want then you asked him the wrong thing. Change your
question and you might get the answer you want.
Understanding how horses behave, learn and think is essential to develop a
training program that is tailor made to the individual horse. Behavior and
training patterns are just general guidelines that should be followed but
not always relied upon. The individual nature of the horses personality
combined with his individual life experience will often alter his behavior
and learning patterns.

Will Clinging 2006 (c)
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