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FAQ

While dominance can sometimes play a role, most dogs sit on their owners for comfort, affection, or attention—not to assert control.
A dog imprinted on you will seek constant physical closeness, show signs of affection, follow you everywhere, and look to you for comfort and security.
Dogs sit on their owners for comfort, affection, security, or attention, often reflecting bonding instincts, learned behaviors, or breed tendencies.
Dogs sit on people for comfort, affection, security, and sometimes to seek attention or mark territory. This behavior is rooted in their instincts and the bond they share with their owners.
Yes, police dogs are increasingly trained using positive reinforcement methods, which enhance learning, trust, and performance without inducing fear or stress.
To train a dog with positive reinforcement, reward your dog immediately after a desired behavior using treats, praise, or toys to increase the likelihood it will repeat the behavior.
Yes, police dogs can be trained using positive reinforcement techniques, which emphasize rewarding desired behaviors to encourage repetition.
Positive reinforcement training involves rewarding a dog with treats, praise, or toys immediately after a desired behavior to encourage it to happen again.
Yes, police dogs are increasingly trained using positive reinforcement methods, which enhance learning, trust, and performance without inducing fear or stress.
To train a dog with positive reinforcement, reward your dog immediately after a desired behavior using treats, praise, or toys to increase the likelihood it will repeat the behavior.

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