Academic literature on the topic 'Canine Training'

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Journal articles on the topic "Canine Training"

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Grebenkemper, John, Adela Morris, Brian F. Byrd, and Laurel Engbring. "Applying Canine Detection in Support of Collaborative Archaeology." Advances in Archaeological Practice 9, no. 3 (July 9, 2021): 226–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aap.2021.12.

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AbstractThis article explores the use of specially trained canines to detect the location of human burials in nonmodern archaeological contexts. It discusses the history of the discipline, training and field methods, the importance of developing a working relationship with descendant communities, project examples, an assessment of canine detection effectiveness, and ways to select a canine detection team. The article highlights how the application of canine detection training and protocols to the archaeological record makes it possible to locate potential precontact Native American burial areas without ground disturbance. In some cases, probable burial areas located by canines can be confidentially mapped to ensure avoidance during upcoming construction projects. For a variety of reasons, many Native American communities have been wary of embracing this new method to locate ancestral burials. Today, however, canine detection is widely accepted by many tribal groups in California to locate ancestral burials that might be impacted by construction. Although additional controlled studies and rigorous field laboratory experiments are needed to understand the range of variation in efficacy fully, available results in both North America and Europe demonstrate that specially trained canines can often accurately locate human burials that are more than a thousand years old to within a few meters.
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Haller, Nicolas, Jacob Reiss, Frank Seipel, Robert Weishar, Zachary Alden, Tracy Jane Puccinelli, and Julie Walker. "Development of a Synthetic Training Model for Canine Thoracocentesis." Alternatives to Laboratory Animals 48, no. 2 (March 2020): 78–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0261192920924408.

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Thoracocentesis, a procedure in which air or fluid is removed from the pleural space, is used to relieve respiratory distress, and as a diagnostic procedure in human and veterinary medicine. Veterinary students commonly learn and practice the procedure on canine cadavers which are in limited supply and are not amenable to long-term storage and use. Practicing thoracocentesis on a cadaveric model also provides limited feedback indicative of success and/or procedural complications. One commercial model for practicing canine thoracocentesis is available, but it costs over US$2000 and is excessively bulky. In order to improve the learning process for veterinary students, we have developed a reusable synthetic canine thorax model that accurately replicates the thoracocentesis procedure, provides immediate feedback to the students and reduces the need for canine cadavers. The low cost of our product provides an efficient alternative to cadavers for instruction in veterinary schools or hospitals.
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Hong, Sa-Hyeok, and Seok-Chan Eun. "Experimental Forelimb Allotransplantation in Canine Model." BioMed Research International 2016 (2016): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/1495710.

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As reconstructive transplantation is gaining popularity as a viable alternative for upper limb amputees, it is becoming increasingly important for plastic surgeons to renew surgical skills and knowledge of this area. Forelimb allotransplantation research has been performed previously in rodent and swine models. However, preclinical canine forelimb allotransplantation studies are lacking in the literature. The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of the surgical skills necessary to successfully perform forelimb transplantation in canines as a means to prepare for clinical application. A total of 18 transplantation operations on canines were performed. The recipient limb was shortened at the one-third proximal forearm level. The operation was performed in the following order: bones (two reconstructive plates), muscles and tendons (separately sutured), nerves (median, ulnar, and radial nerve), arteries (two), and veins (two). The total mean time of transplantation was 5 hours ± 30 minutes. All of the animals that received transplantation were treated with FK-506 (tacrolimus, 2 mg/kg) for 7 days after surgery. Most allografts survived with perfect viability without vascular problems during the early postoperative period. The canine forelimb allotransplantation model is well qualified to be a suitable training model for standard transplantation and future research work.
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Zong, Pu, Srinath Setty, Wei Sun, Rodolfo Martinez, Johnathan D. Tune, Igor V. Ehrenburg, Elena N. Tkatchouk, Robert T. Mallet, and H. Fred Downey. "Intermittent Hypoxic Training Protects Canine Myocardium from Infarction." Experimental Biology and Medicine 229, no. 8 (September 2004): 806–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/153537020422900813.

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Tipple, Christopher A., Patricia T. Caldwell, Brian M. Kile, Douglas J. Beussman, Blake Rushing, Natalie J. Mitchell, Christian J. Whitchurch, Martin Grime, Rex Stockham, and Brian A. Eckenrode. "Comprehensive characterization of commercially available canine training aids." Forensic Science International 242 (September 2014): 242–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.forsciint.2014.06.033.

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da Silva, Dayane Aparecida Francisco, Aline Angela Fernandes, Ana Evellyn Ventrone, Ariane Dias, Ana Maria Siqueira Silveira, Cecilia Laposy Santarém, Gabrielle Gomes dos Santos Ribeiro, and Rosa Maria Barilli Nogueira. "The influence of low-fidelity simulator training on canine peripheral venous puncture procedure." Veterinary World 14, no. 2 (February 15, 2021): 410–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.14202/vetworld.2021.410-418.

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Background and Aim: Blood collection from dogs is the most commonly performed procedure in the medical clinic. However, different factors can interfere with the quality of the material collected, potentially causing complications for patients. Simulated skill training is a teaching strategy designed to provide early training to students, develop their skills and self-confidence, and increase the procedure's success while reducing complications. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate skill training using a low-fidelity simulator in the peripheral venipuncture procedure and examine the training's influence on the in vivo procedure. Materials and Methods: To assess skill training, this study used a low-fidelity simulator in the peripheral venipuncture procedure and examines the training's effect on the in vivo procedure. In total, 100 dogs, 65 undergraduate students, 3 veterinarians, and 4 previously trained evaluators participated. The canine in vivo venipuncture procedure was evaluated both before and after the simulated skill training and the low-fidelity simulator training. Data were collected on participants' self-confidence levels. Results: Local complications occurred during in vivo practice; however, after training, they decreased. Gloves were more frequently used during the procedure, resulting in a reduction of both harvest attempts and complications, as well as increased levels of self-confidence in post-training participants. The simulator developed had low fidelity, low cost, and was easy to create. Conclusion: Skill training in peripheral venipuncture using a low-fidelity simulator positively influences student learning, increases their self-confidence during in vivo harvesting, and reduces the complications of the procedure, improving patient well-being.
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M, Albertini. "Canine Scent Detection of Lung Cancer: Preliminary Results." Open Access Journal of Veterinary Science & Research 1, no. 4 (2016): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.23880/oajvsr-16000118.

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Several researches have evidenced that cancer cells can produce volatile organic compounds (VOCs) which are released not only in breath but also in other organic fluids, such as blood and urine. This study has evaluated the olfactory capability of trained dogs to detect human lung cancer VOCs in urine. We recruited 150 subjects from European Institute of Oncology (IEO) divided into three groups: 57 patients with lung cancer (group 1); 38 patients with lung disease, other than cancer (group 2); 55 healthy co ntrol subjects (group 3).The results are referred to the last 45 days of training, and evidenced that dogs reached a mean success rate that exceeded 80%, with a sensitivity of 0,72 and a specificity of 0,94 for two out of three dogs enrolled. The important novelty is that dogs can discriminate lung cancer not only from healthy subjects, but also from patients with other lung diseases. The results obtained so far are encouraging and lead us to persevere with the training session in order to improve the succe ss rate, reaching values as close as possible to 100%. If so, we believe that, in the future, dogs may be used to perform early diagnostic tests, useful in improving the chances of survival in cases of human lung cancer.
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Clark, Jonathan H., Dan Garrette, Iulia Turc, and John Wieting. "Canine: Pre-training an Efficient Tokenization-Free Encoder for Language Representation." Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics 10 (2022): 73–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/tacl_a_00448.

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Abstract Pipelined NLP systems have largely been superseded by end-to-end neural modeling, yet nearly all commonly used models still require an explicit tokenization step. While recent tokenization approaches based on data-derived subword lexicons are less brittle than manually engineered tokenizers, these techniques are not equally suited to all languages, and the use of any fixed vocabulary may limit a model’s ability to adapt. In this paper, we present Canine, a neural encoder that operates directly on character sequences—without explicit tokenization or vocabulary—and a pre-training strategy that operates either directly on characters or optionally uses subwords as a soft inductive bias. To use its finer-grained input effectively and efficiently, Canine combines downsampling, which reduces the input sequence length, with a deep transformer stack, which encodes context. Canine outperforms a comparable mBert model by 5.7 F1 on TyDi QA, a challenging multilingual benchmark, despite having fewer model parameters.
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Binfet, John-Tyler, and Kathryn Struik. "Dogs on Campus." Society & Animals 28, no. 5-6 (February 26, 2018): 489–509. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685306-12341495.

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Abstract Once used mostly in clinical settings such as hospitals and geriatric care centers, canine animal-assisted therapy programs have become increasingly commonplace on university campuses to reduce stress and support students’ social and emotional well-being. Researchers responding to the call for increased empirical rigor in studies assessing the effects of animal-assisted therapy and practitioners seeking to initiate well-being programs on campus can face challenges in accessing therapy dogs and their volunteer handlers. This article outlines how therapy canines and their handlers may be holistically assessed for participation in university-based initiatives and presents a model that includes the prescreening of volunteer handlers, training sessions for handlers, the use of multiple raters to assess canine temperament and behavior, the use of mock sessions, and the use of ongoing formative evaluation and feedback for handlers once they are accepted into the program.
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Ramo, P., R. Kettunen, and L. Hirvonen. "Hemodynamic effects of endurance training on canine left ventricle." American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology 252, no. 1 (January 1, 1987): H7—H13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.1987.252.1.h7.

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To investigate the effects of endurance training on myocardial performance seven beagle dogs (exercise group, EG) were trained by treadmill running for 6–7 wk. Before and after experimental period the EG and control group (CG, n = 7) underwent a standard submaximal exercise test (SMT), and hemodynamic status was checked during anesthesia by catheterization technique exposing the animals to different loadings: pacing, volume loading, and isoproterenol infusion. The increase of heart rate during SMT was about 30 beats/min less in the EG than in the CG. A highly linear relationship between stroke work and end-diastolic volume was observed within the groups (for EG r = 0.953, for CG r = 0.846), but the slope of the regression line obtained for EG appeared to be significantly (P less than 0.001) greater. In EG isoproterenol induced increases in end-diastolic (27%), end-systolic (37%), and stroke volumes (19%), but, on the contrary, decreases of these volumes in CG (19, 15, and 22%, respectively); ejection fraction remained unchanged for both EG and CG. Ventricular stroke work was significantly greater in EG. Systemic vascular resistance decreased in EG in every loading test. The results indicate an improved pump performance, which is related not only to the heterometric autoregulatory adjustments, but also to extracardial adaptations.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Canine Training"

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Humbert, Emily H. "Canine-Based Training Programs in Prisons as a Deweyan Ethic." OpenSIUC, 2021. https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/dissertations/1920.

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In this dissertation, I propose that a Deweyan ethic—supplemented by Care ethics and ecofeminism can better evaluate, enhance, and nurture human/nonhuman animal relationships. While Peter Singer’s utilitarianism and Tom Regan’s deontology are considered the dominant ethical theories in the field of animal ethics, they cannot fully attend to the complexities of human/nonhuman animal relationships. Some of the shortcomings of Singer’s and Regan’s theories explored in this dissertation are the absence of context, the dichotomization of reason/emotion and human/animal, the calculative sterility of moral deliberation, and the problematic language of ‘rights.’ Further, I propose that a supplemented Deweyan ethic might be fruitfully applied to two canine-training programs in prisons: Paws in Prisons (PIP) and A Dog On Prison Turf (ADOPT). I use the work of Angela Davis and Bénédicte Boisseron on prisons to explore how a Deweyan ethic might be better equipped to evaluate and enhance these relationships, given their location. To fully appreciate the capacity of a Deweyan ethic in human/nonhuman animal relationships, one must wrestle with the messiness of the program’s location while at the same time acknowledge that despite the fact that they are in prison, something meaningful happens here between human/nonhuman animals. In the Deweyan spirit, I test this hypothesis by interviewing participants in these programs and use those qualitative aspects as feedback for my initial hypotheses.
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O'Shea, John G. "Field threshold measures for canine olfaction." Thesis, This resource online, 1995. http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08042009-040622/.

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Currie, Nikki S. "A case study of incarcerated males participating in a canine training program." Diss., Manhattan, Kan. : Kansas State University, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/2097/1028.

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Joyner, Brian N. "Basic entry level skills & legal requirements for law enforcement bloodhound canine teams." Online version, 2003. http://www.uwstout.edu/lib/thesis/2003/2003joynerb.pdf.

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Powell, Ellie B. "Impacts of cleanser, material type, methods for cleaning and training on canine decontamination." OpenSIUC, 2018. https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/theses/2275.

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Search-and -rescue (SAR) teams spend days and sometimes weeks in the field following a disaster. After completing their assigned mission, handlers and canines return to base, potentially bringing contaminated material with them. There were 3 objectives for this study; (1) the effects of cleanser and equipment materials on the efficiency of decontamination protocols, (2) the effects of improved treatments on the efficiency of decontamination protocols and (3) the use of field kits and improved training on decontamination techniques in the field. In the first study, straps (n = 54) were cut from biothane, leather and nylon. Straps were washed with three kinds of cleansers; Dawn dishwashing detergent, Johnson and Johnson’s Head-to-toe baby wash and Simple Green. In addition, three different types of treatments: 5-minute soak (A), double 5-minute soak (B) and a 3-minute soak with a 2-minute agitation (C). In the second study, straps (n = 40) of leather and nylon were utilized. Unlike the previous study, only Dawn dishwashing detergent and Johnson and Johnson’s Head-To-Toe-Baby Wash were selected as cleansers for decontamination. In addition, improved treatments (PW or SK) were created and utilized to further decontaminant the straps. The finally part of the study utilized canine teams (n = 10), composed of canine and handlers and were randomly assigned to one of two groups. Groups were structured as follows: TRAINED (n = 5) received 30-minutes of interactive training (using the illustrated guide contained in the kit) on proper utilization of equipment provided; UNTRAINED (n = 5) received the same field kit and an illustrated guide with no interactive training. An oil-based pseudocontaminant (GloGerm®) was topically applied to the straps in the first two studies and then to four anatomic sites on the canine participants: cranial neck, between the shoulder blades, left medial hindlimb and hind left paw in the last study. Pre- and post-images were taken of the straps and at the four anatomical locations prior to and following decontamination. Images were analyzed via two methods 1) categorical scores; 2) measured fluorescent reduction. Categorical scores were assigned, using two blinded reviewers (Venable et. al., 2017). The categorical scores were allotted as follows: 0 = <24% contaminant reduction; 1 = 25-50% contaminant reduction; 2 = 51-75% contaminant reduction; and 3 = >76% contaminant reduction (Lee et al., 2014). No score discrepancies >1 were observed between reviewers. Score data were analyzed using SAS version 9.4 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC), as a Chi Square with PROC FREQ and measurement data were analyzed using PROC ANOVA. Results in the first study indicate that material (P = .2331), cleanser (P = .2156) and treatment (P = .9139) had no effect on contaminant reduction. However, when treatments were improved in the second study, power wash was more effective at contaminant reduction (P = .0004). In addition, material was also determined to have an effect on decontamination (P = .0135). Although, the kind of cleanser used had no effect (P = .3564). Additionally, in the last study, TRAINED handlers were more effective at contamination reduction (P = .0093) as compared to their UNTRAINED counterparts. The initial results indicate that no combination of material, cleanser or treatment had any effect on reducing the oil-based contaminants. Nevertheless, with improved treatments there is a potential to more thoroughly decontaminate the collars and leashes. In addition, study three indicates that handlers, when properly trained, can achieve reduction of oil-based contaminants with a basic field kit and a garden hose. These data have implications for management of canines in the field that may be exposed to unknown substances and require timely decontamination.
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Teles, Rita Tique Arriaga. "Efeito do treino na neurobioquímica cerebral do cão." Master's thesis, Universidade de Évora, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/10174/23173.

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Com o objetivo de perceber de se o treino afeta a comunicação química do cérebro canino de uma forma permanente, estudaram-se dois grupos de cães: um grupo de cães treinado com marcadores e outro grupo sem contacto com nenhum tipo de treino. Foram recolhidas amostras sanguíneas dos dois grupos e medidas as concentrações de serotonina e dopamina. Os valores médios encontrados para a serotonina e dopamina para o grupo de controlo foram de 269.66 μg/l 56,97 ng/l respetivamente. Para a serotonina, a comparação das médias revelou diferenças entre os grupos (p=0,087), havendo uma diminuição no grupo de cães treinados. Já a dopamina não se verificou ser diferente entres os dois grupos estudados (p=0,2). As vias dopaminérgicas ativadas em situações de compulsão/adição são as mesmas que se ativam no circuito do reforço. Também os valores de serotonina estão diminuídos nesses casos, sugerindo que poderá haver uma componente compulsiva/aditiva em cães treinados; ABSTRACT: The effect of training markers in the cerebral neurochemistry of the dog To understand if dog training affects permanently the chemical communication of canine brain, two groups of dogs were studied: one group had dogs trained with markers and the other one had dogs without any type of training. Blood samples were collected from both groups and concentrations of serotonin and dopamine were measured. The mean values found for serotonin and dopamine for the control group were 269.66 μg/l and 56.93 ng/l respectively. Comparison of means of the groups revealed different values of serotonin between the two groups (p-value= 0,087) having a decrease in serotonin in the trained dog group. As for dopamine, it was not found to be different between the two groups studied (p-value=0,2). The dopaminergic pathways activated in compulsion/addition situations are the same ones that activate in the reinforcement circuit. Also, serotonin levels are decreased in these cases, suggesting that there may be a compulsive/additive component in trained dogs.
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Moustafa, Moustafa Bayoumi. "Molecular adaptations of cardiac and skeletal muscles to endurance training in a canine model of sudden death." Columbus, Ohio : Ohio State University, 2005. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=osu1133375886.

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Cerreta, Michelle. "The Creation and Evaluation of Novel Canine Training Aids for Cocaine Using Molecularly Encapsulated Sol-Gel Polymers and an Investigation of Canine Field Accuracy." FIU Digital Commons, 2015. http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/1901.

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Biological detectors, such as canines, are valuable tools used for the rapid identification of illicit materials. However, recent increased scrutiny over the reliability, field accuracy, and the capabilities of each detection canine is currently being evaluated in the legal system. For example, the Supreme Court case, State of Florida v. Harris, discussed the need for continuous monitoring of canine abilities, thresholds, and search capabilities. As a result, the fallibility of canines for detection was brought to light, as well as a need for further research and understanding of canine detection. This study is two-fold, as it looks to not only create new training aids for canines that can be manipulated for dissipation control, but also investigates canine field accuracy to objects with similar odors to illicit materials. It was the goal of this research to improve upon current canine training aid mimics. Sol-gel polymer training aids, imprinted with the active odor of cocaine, were developed. This novel training aid improved upon the longevity of currently existing training aids, while also provided a way to manipulate the polymer network to alter the dissipation rate of the imprinted active odors. The manipulation of the polymer network could allow handlers to control the abundance of odors presented to their canines, familiarizing themselves to their canine’s capabilities and thresholds, thereby increasing the canines’ strength in court. The field accuracy of detection canines was recently called into question during the Supreme Court case, State of Florida v. Jardines, where it was argued that if cocaine’s active odor, methyl benzoate, was found to be produced by the popular landscaping flower, snapdragons, canines will false alert to said flowers. Therefore, snapdragon flowers were grown and tested both in the laboratory and in the field to determine the odors produced by snapdragon flowers; the persistence of these odors once flowers have been cut; and whether detection canines will alert to both growing and cut flowers during a blind search scenario. Results revealed that although methyl benzoate is produced by snapdragon flowers, certified narcotics detection canines can distinguish cocaine’s odor profile from that of snapdragon flowers and will not alert.
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Owens, Chase. "A Constructional Approach to Establishing and Maintaining Calm Canine Behavior." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2017. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc984128/.

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Very few behavior-change programs with canines produce effects that persist beyond the training condition. The present study is an experimental demonstration of a constructional program that established calm patterns of behavior as alternatives to hyperactive ones. Three dogs that exhibited hyperactive patterns were chosen as subjects. Seven conditions common to canine-caretaker relationships were used to determine which factors resulted in the hyperactive patterns. Then, sitting and lying down were taught as beginning points using touch as a reinforcer. The final behavior, maintained by naturally occurring reinforcers, was established errorlessly. The study used a control-analysis strategy of behavior change with a changing-criterion design. The intervention resulted in an immediate reduction in hyperactivity and an increase in sitting and lying down for all dogs.
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Huertas-Rivera, Adhly M. "Identification of the Active Odors From Illicit Substances for the Development of Optimal Canine Training Aids." FIU Digital Commons, 2016. http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/2990.

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The exploitation of illicit substances, such as drugs and explosives, is on the rise. Special attention must therefore be considered to reduce the transportation and storage of these illicit substances by improving the capability of detection, even when hidden from view. Although analytical methods of detection for both drugs and explosives have improved over time, biological detectors, such as canines, are still commonly used. In comparison to humans, these canines have a larger number of olfactory receptors and a greater olfactory epithelium surface area, providing them with a more enhanced olfaction than that of humans. The premise for the detection of illicit drugs and explosives is based on the premise that these substances though hidden, will emit volatile organic compounds (VOCs). These VOCs are not often the parent drug or explosive, they are essentially a chemical associated with the source and provide a reliable indication of the illicit substance. Previous successful research has been conducted on the identification of the active odors present in the headspace of cocaine, methamphetamine, and MDMA but instead for marijuana and heroin there have been minimum success. Thus, in the present research a method using headspace solid-phase microextraction coupled to gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (HS-SPME-GC-MS) was optimized to identify the VOCs makeup of heroin and marijuana to further identify the active odor compound(s) responsible for the alert response of biological detectors (canines). A mixture of acetic acid and acetylsalicylic acid was identified as target odor mimic for heroin by certified detector canines, while a mixture of limonene and caryophyllene was recognized as odor mimic for marijuana by conducting ORTs. The training aids developed successfully mimic the scent of the actual illicit substance and can be used to improve the capabilities of both drug and explosive detection canines. Additionally, as growing threat of improvised explosives has created a worldwide concern and emphasized the requirement of a greater spectra of canine training aids that covers the complete range of explosives available, a new approach for the creation of training aids for IEDs have been evaluated. The use of a dynamic collection system have proved to be an option to develop fast and reliable canine training aids for IEDs.
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Books on the topic "Canine Training"

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Club, American Kennel, ed. Citizen canine. Freehold, NJ: Kennel Club Books, 2009.

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Caran, Rick. Canine boot camp. Avon, MA: Adams Media, 2007.

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Chartier, Gilles. L'éducation canine. [Montréal]: Éditions de l'Homme, 1991.

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McMains, Joel M. Manstopper!: Training a canine guardian. New York: Howell Book House, 1998.

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Superdog: Raising the perfect canine companion. New York: Howell Book House, 1990.

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W, Fox Michael. Superdog: Raising the perfect canine companion. New York: Howell Book House, 1990.

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Arner, L. D. Delineating toxic areas by canine olfaction. Cincinnati, OH: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Hazardous Waste Engineering Research Laboratory, 1986.

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Peak performance: Coaching the canine athlete. New York: Howell Book House, 1992.

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Volhard, Joachim. The canine good citizen: Every dog can be one. New York: Howell Book House, 1994.

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Volhard, Joachim. The canine good citizen: Every dog can be one. 2nd ed. New York: Howell Book House, 1997.

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Book chapters on the topic "Canine Training"

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Hedges, Stephanie. "Learning and training." In Practical canine behaviour: for veterinary nurses and technicians, 81–100. Wallingford: CABI, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/9781789246810.0007.

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Majikes, John J., Sherrie Yuschak, Katherine Walker, Rita Brugarolas, Sean Mealin, Marc Foster, Alper Bozkurt, Barbara Sherman, and David L. Roberts. "Stimulus Control for Semi-autonomous Computer Canine-Training." In Biomimetic and Biohybrid Systems, 279–90. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-63537-8_24.

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Aviles-Rosa, Edgar O., Mallory T. DeChant, and Nathaniel J. Hall. "Training the Sensor: Impacts of Learning on Canine Detection and Performance." In Canines, 381–411. New York: Jenny Stanford Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003261131-13.

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Mullen, Matthew, and Braden C. Giordano. "Considerations in Vapor Generation and Delivery for Canine Testing and Training." In Canines, 511–32. New York: Jenny Stanford Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003261131-17.

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Laverick, DeAnna. "Children’s Ideas About Canine Behavioral Issues and Training Practices." In Children, Dogs and Education, 109–30. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-77845-7_6.

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Hedges, Stephanie. "In-practice advice." In Practical canine behaviour: for veterinary nurses and technicians, 241–56. Wallingford: CABI, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/9781789246810.0018.

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Abstract This chapter outlines simple advice that the veterinary nurse or technician can give in practice for managing unwanted behaviour where there is no indication that the dog should be examined by a veterinarian, referred to a veterinary behaviourist or clinical animal behaviourist or that the advice/support should be given by an animal training instructor.
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Olmert, Meg Daley, Michelle Nordstrom, Marshall Peters, Matthew St Laurent, and Rick Yount. "Canine Connection Therapy: Finding Purpose and Healing Through the Training of Service Dogs." In Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Related Diseases in Combat Veterans, 197–209. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-22985-0_14.

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Gillespie, Bradley. "Training Considerations for Operational Performance: Train the Handler, Train the Dog, Train the Team." In Canines, 413–37. New York: Jenny Stanford Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003261131-14.

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Simonetta, Gianluca. "Puer bonus communicandi peritus. Esercizi e strumenti per dibattere tra pari." In Competing, cooperating, deciding: towards a model of deliberative debate, 129–43. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-5518-329-1.12.

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The peer learning project RApP (Ragazze e Ragazzi apprendono tra Pari) took place at the ISIS Gobetti-Volta high school in Bagno a Ripoli, Florence. With the aim to develop debate and public speaking activities, the project applies the IDEAM method, known as the five canons of ancient rhetoric (Inventio, Dispositio, Elocutio, Actio and Memoria). Thanks to this framework, it is possible to visualize and apply changes to the organization and writing of an effective speech, as well as to its memorization and delivery in public. A platform of applied training combined with a set of propaedeutic exercises based on the approach of ancient progymnasmata outlines a gradual pathway aimed at strengthening the uses of language as an individual skill, with a view to acquiring the skills to use language in the social environment of debate.
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Lit, Lisa. "Evaluating Learning Tasks Commonly Applied in Detection Dog Training." In Canine Ergonomics, 99–114. CRC Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781420079920.ch6.

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Conference papers on the topic "Canine Training"

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Alcaidinho, Joelle, Giancarlo Valentin, Gregory D. Abowd, and Melody Jackson. "Training collar-sensed gestures for canine communication." In ACI '16: Third International Conference on Animal-Computer Interaction. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2995257.3012020.

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Farrell, Jai, Chris McCarthy, and Caslon Chua. "Towards Animal Computer Interaction Testing for Assistive Canine Training." In ACI'2020: Seventh International Conference on Animal-Computer Interaction. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3446002.3446061.

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Brugarolas, R., D. Roberts, B. Sherman, and A. Bozkurt. "Posture estimation for a canine machine interface based training system." In 2012 34th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/embc.2012.6346964.

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Farrell, Jai, Chris McCarthy, and Caslon Chua. "Exploration of Technology Requirements for the Assistance Canine Training Industry." In ACI'19: Sixth International Conference on Animal-Computer Interaction. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3371049.3371059.

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Farrell, Jai, Chris McCarthy, and Caslon Chua. "Adapting HCI techniques for the design and evaluation of canine training technologies." In OzCHI '18: 30th Australian Computer-Human Interaction Conference. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3292147.3292191.

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Dowell, C. "249. Occupational Exposures During the Preparation of Pseudo Narcotics for Canine Training." In AIHce 2005. AIHA, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.3320/1.2758709.

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Raffan, Hazel, Julien Guevar, Matthieu Poyade, and Paul Rea. "CREATION OF A DIGITAL TRAINING PACKAGE FOR CANINE NEUROANATOMY FOR THE UNDERGRADUATE VETERINARY CURRICULUM." In International Technology, Education and Development Conference. IATED, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.21125/inted.2016.0254.

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Harper, Ross J., Jose R. Almirall, and Kenneth G. Furton. "Discrimination of smokeless powders by headspace SPME-GC-MS and SPME-GC-ECD, and the potential implications upon training canine detection of explosives." In Defense and Security, edited by Edward M. Carapezza. SPIE, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.603928.

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Orloff, M., M. Agullo, V. Ferreira, and C. Boronad. "GM-002 Training of health professionals in the good use of insulin: satisfaction survey." In 22nd EAHP Congress 22–24 March 2017 Cannes, France. British Medical Journal Publishing Group, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/ejhpharm-2017-000640.348.

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Roland, C., A. Guerin, P. Vaconsin, and JF Bussieres. "OHP-001 Hospital pharmacy technicians in france and quebec: differences in training and practice." In 22nd EAHP Congress 22–24 March 2017 Cannes, France. British Medical Journal Publishing Group, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/ejhpharm-2017-000640.395.

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Reports on the topic "Canine Training"

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DeGreeff, Lauryn E., Susan L. Rose-Pehrsson, Michael Malito, and Christopher J. Katilie. Analytical Support, Characterization, and Optimization of a Canine Training Aid Delivery System: Phase 2. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, January 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada635070.

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Yusrina, Asri, Ulfah Alifia, Shintia Revina, Rezanti Putri Pramana, and Luhur Bima. Is the Game Worth the Candle? Examining the Effectiveness of Initial Teacher Education in Indonesia. Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE), August 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.35489/bsg-rise-wp_2022/106.

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An impactful teacher education programme equips teachers with knowledge and skills to improve their effectiveness. Empirical findings on the effectiveness of teacher preparation programmes show that the accountability of institutions and teachers should not only be based on the knowledge or skills produced but also on student learning. Our study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of a pre-service teacher education programme in Indonesia, known as Pendidikan Profesi Guru Prajabatan or PPG. PPG is a one-year full-time programme in addition to four years of undergraduate teacher education (Bachelor of Education). PPG graduate teachers pass a selection process and receive a teaching certificate upon completion of the programme. We use mixed methods to understand the differences in the outcome of PPG graduates majoring in primary school teacher education to their counterparts who did not attend PPG. To estimate the impact of PPG, we exploit the combination of rules and events in the selection process which allows us to estimate the impact of PPG on teacher performance using fuzzy regression discontinuity design (RDD). Once we attest to the validity of the fuzzy RDD, we find that PPG has no impact on a teacher’s professional knowledge and student outcomes in numeracy and literacy. We argue that this is due to the ineffective selection mechanism in distinguishing the PPG and the comparison group. We conclude that as an initial teacher training programme, PPG did not improve teacher effectiveness. Despite incorporating best practices from effective teacher training into the programme design, PPG does not appear capable of producing a higher-quality teacher.
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Health hazard evaluation report: HETA-2004-0012-2948, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Canine Enforcement Training Center, Front Royal, Virginia. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, December 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.26616/nioshheta200400122948.

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