VV Litter Temperament Test Results

VV Litter Temperament Test Results
The VV Litter was tested at 54 Days.
Whelped 10/26/21:  3 females and 1 male, all black sables

Mr. Blue went to a friend in Spokane who has his sister, Pilot, from the OO litter.  He, too, will compete in all kinds of venues.  Miss Green went to southern Utah for Search and Rescue.  My friend and training partner, Laurie, took Miss Purple to train her as a service dog.  We will eventually place her like we did Talon from the TT litter.  Like Talon, I will publish Miss Purple’s training log on the website as Laurie sends it to me.  If you are interested, you can still see Talon’s training log.

I am keeping Miss Pink for breeding and competition.  Her call name is going to be “Varoom!!”  When the pups finally hit the ground and were healthy, I mentioned in an email that I had been afraid to jinx things by working on possible names.  Several friends sent some great names, including Pat, who sent “Varoom!!”  Her registered name is “Celhaus Victory Against All Odds.”


See the temperament test photos

My good friend, Suzan Guilford, usually does the police/narcotics test.  Suzan is a former K9 handler and police officer, former police chief, and has taught at the Wyoming Police Academy.  She has done my temperament tests for over twenty years, except for a two-year absence while she was working in Florida.  Suzan and I over the years have incorporated most of the SAR exercises into her testing so she can include them in case Bonnie can’t come do the SAR testing, which happened this time due to icy roads. 

The main difference I see between the police/narcotics test and the SAR test is the attitude of the tester.  In the police test, the tester is very quiet, talking little and using very little body movements.  No other people are present and the environment is kept quiet.  In the SAR test, the tester (often two do the test together) is somewhat more enthusiastic, uses some verbal praise and body movements to get the pup “up” and gives praise.  Other people are sometimes present to watch, though they are asked to be as quiet as possible.  This would fit well with the ultimate purpose of the dogs being tested for both types of training.  In police work the dog must be able to dig down deep inside himself or herself to find the courage and aggression to confront a criminal and/or to search independently and at great distance from the handler.  In SAR the handler is usually closer to the dog and is able to praise and encourage him, especially in extended searches.  There is also generally all kinds of activity and distraction at a search scene so the dog must be able to filter out the extraneous activity and focus on her job.  Both tests are fascinating to watch as is the difference in the pups’ responses in each test.

Results are listed after the description of each part of the Test.  At the bottom, test results are listed for Cantor (father).  We didn’t do any testing on Hesed (mother) as she was extremely stressed when I got her at 8 weeks, never having been off the place or away from littermates until she was put on the plane.

Recently Suzan adapted her test and also added an interpretation statement:

This test was designed for Police dogs and dogs of similar professions.  This is a good predictor of a strong, confident dog, but also one that may be more independent and not as willing to work with humans as much as they just want to work.  Having scores that are average and minimal in some categories may be just what is needed for the agility, therapy or family dog.

This test uses minimal voice, praise and encouragement. 

The tester, Suzan, added a few of the SAR tests to her test:  Retrieving Metal (keys), Hunt for Food I and II, Unstable Footing, Reaction to Strange Object and the Wagon Test.  For some reason she didn’t score the wagon test, but all did well.  I warned them that Miss Pink would probably try to jump out, and she did, but they were ready and caught her.  Nor did Suzan score the reaction to strange objects (neither the mirror nor the battery-operated dog, which she never turned on).  She commented about the keys in the retrieve section.  I include a brief description of each test component and then the pups’ ratings.

POLICE/NARCOTICS TEST COMPONENTS:        
Social Attachment:  Acknowledges new person; dominance or independence
Following:  Willingness to follow and acceptance of tester
Confidence/Elevation:  Confidence/dominance shown when held in air and has no control
Prey/perseverance:  Willingness to chase toy, solidness of bite, use of body to possess
Sound Sensitivity, Can of Rocks: a sudden loud noise behind them, in this case a can of nuts and bolts dropped from about 2’ elevation
Sound Sensitivity, Train:  a moving, whistling battery-operated train engine (if they got different ratings for the two objects, that is listed; otherwise they rated the same on both)
Surprise/Stability:  umbrella opened suddenly as they pass by; not recovery after initial startle

SAR TEST COMPONENTS:
Metal:  See if pup will pick up/carry set of car keys or other piece of metal
Hunt for Food I:  Show pup smelly food on string, drag, then accelerate away so pup will use nose to find food.  Encourage, show food again if needed.
Hunt for Food II:  Hide bits of food.  See if pup will seek food on its own.  If necessary, encourage pup to use its nose to find food; indicate food if needed.  Eyes?  Nose? Methodical?  Systematic?
Reaction to Strange Object (battery operated stuffed dog, mirror propped against wall)
Unstable Footing:  Judge pup’s willingness to cross plastic tarp, wobbly planks, etc.
Wagon:  Judge pup’s confidence in riding in moving wagon

Other comments
My pups are very people-oriented and voice responsive, so they never do as well on the police/narcotic test as on the Search & Rescue test because on this test, the handler is deliberately very calm and quiet and doesn’t say much.  As usual, Suzan commented that the pups came alive when she gave them the tiniest bit of praise.

I am not specifically breeding for police dog candidates, for which they want high drive and activity level – and pushiness.  This is the first litter that had police candidates.  Suzan gives this interpretation statement:  This test was designed for police dogs and dogs of similar professions.  This is a good predictor of a strong, confident dog, but also one that may be more independent and not as willing to work with humans as much as they just want to work.  Having scores that are average and minimal in some categories may be just what is needed for the agility, therapy or family dog.

VV Litter Test Results

  1. Social Attachment The first test involves evaluating the pup’s acceptance of the strange place and its willingness to interact with the stranger.  Ideal reaction is eye contact and interest in the stranger but no sign of nervousness in the interaction (we don’t want a “Protect me!” attitude), followed by visual investigation of the surroundings and then a return of attention to the tester. 

Possible Ratings/General Description
            1 – excellent:  Licked face; tail up, bit at hands, face
            2 – above average:  Licked hands; tail up
            3 – Average – good:  Came readily, tail up
            4 – minimal:  Acknowledged tail down
            5 – insufficient:  Hesitant
            6 – unacceptable:  Did not acknowledge

Pup/ Rating/ Additional Observations
Blue Male:   Above Average
Green Female:  Above Average
Pink Female: Above Average
Purple Female: Average- Good

  1. Following Observing willingness to follow handler, acceptance

Possible Ratings/General Description
            1 – excellent: Followed tail up, underfoot, bit at feet
            2 – above average:  Followed, tail up, underfoot
            3 – Average – good:  Followed, tail up
            4 – minimal:  Followed, tail down
            5 – insufficient:  Followed hesitantly, tail down
            6 – unacceptable:  Did not follow, went away

Pup/ Rating/ Additional Observations
Blue Male:  Excellent
Green Female:  Above Average
Pink Female:  Above Average
Purple Female:  Average – Good

  1. Restraint/Submission The submission test, done for 30 seconds, is designed to give an idea of the pup’s tractability, trust in humans, and willingness to submit to a human’s directives. In the submission test the pup is held firmly on its back for a short period of time.  The tester counts the seconds it takes for him to resist, then accept, the restraint.  She should not passively accept the restraint, nor should she panic or show avoidance of eye contact.  Ideal reaction is to resist, then submit and look the tester in the face.  We also look for a willingness to forgive the tester. 

Possible Ratings/General Description

            1 – excellent:  Settled, struggled, settled with some eye contact
            2 – above average:  Struggled fiercely, flailed
            3 – Average – good:  Struggled fiercely, bit, flailed
            4 – minimal:  Struggled, then settled
            5 – insufficient:  No struggle
            6 – unacceptable: No struggle, strained to avoid eye contact

Pup/ Rating/ Additional Observations
Blue Male:  Insufficient; kept eye contact
Green Female:  Excellent
Pink Female:  Above Average
Purple Female:  Above Average

  1. Social Dominance Stroking pup until it reacts

Possible Ratings/General Description
            1 – excellent:  Cuddled up to tester, licked face
            2 – above average:  Jumped, pawed
            3 – Average – good:  Jumped, pawed, bit, growled
            4 – minimal:  Squirmed, licked at hands
            5 – insufficient:  Rolled over, licked hands
            6 – unacceptable:  Went away and stayed away

Pup/ Rating
Blue Male:  Excellent
Green Female:  Excellent
Pink Female:  Minimal
Purple Female:  Excellent

  1. Confidence/Elevation The confidence part of the test involves holding the pup out at arm’s length for several seconds.  Again, the pup should accept the handler putting it in position and remain calm.

Possible Ratings/General Description
            1 – excellent:  Struggled, settled, struggled, settled
            2 – above average:  Struggled
            3 – Average – good:  Struggled, tried to bite
            4 – minimal:  No struggle, relaxed
            5 – insufficient:  No struggle, body still
            6 – unacceptable:  No struggle, body froze

Pup/ Rating/ Additional Observations
Blue Male:  Minimal
Green Female:  Minimal
Pink Female:  Above Average
Purple Female:  Minimal

  1. Retrieve Ball/Toy Next, willingness to retrieve is evaluated using different balls.  The tester looks for desire to chase and desire to bring back, noting independence or willingness to work with a human. Ideal reaction is to repeatedly being the toy back to the handler rather than moving off to “possess” it.  The type of bite on the toys is evaluated:  a full mouth bite shows more confidence and drive than a front-teeth-only bite.

Possible Ratings/General Description
            1 – excellent:  Chased object, picked it up and returned with it
            2 – above average:  Chased object, picked it up and returned without it
            3 – Average – good:  Chased object, stood over it, did not return
            4 – minimal:  Chased object, picked it up, ran away
            5 – insufficient:  Started to chase, lost interest
            6 – unacceptable:  No chase

Pup/ Rating/ Additional Observations
Blue Male:  Above Average; retrieved 1X
Green Female:  Excellent (1X) and Average – Good (marked both)
Pink Female:  Excellent
Purple Female:  Average – Good

  1. (Pain) Sensitivity The loose skin over the ribs is gently pinched and the pup’s reaction is noted.  Ideal reaction is to notice the pinch but be unconcerned by it.  We also look for a willingness to forgive the tester.

Possible Ratings/General Description
           1 – excellent:  8 – 10 count for response
            2 – above average:  6 – 8 count for response
            3 – Average – good:  5 – 6 count for response
            4 – minimal:  3 – 5 count for response
            5 – insufficient:  2 – 3 count for response
            6 – unacceptable:  1 – 2 count for response

Pup/ Rating
Blue Male:  Excellent
Green Female:  Excellent
Pink Female:  Above Average
Purple Female:  Above Average

  1. Prey/Perseverance Then perseverance is evaluated by seeing how enthusiastically they will pursue, grab hold, and tug on a rope or sack.  They look for chasing, solidness of grip and use of body.  Ideal reaction is to pursue enthusiastically, grasp with a full mouth bite, tug and do everything possible to posses the object.  If a sack is used, we like to see a pup get its whole body on the sack in an effort to subdue it.

Possible Ratings/General Description
            1 – excellent:  Chased or tugged continually, full bite, used body on object
            2 – above average:  Chased, tugged, good bite, used feet.
            3 – Average – good:  Chased, tugged, bit, may release and re-bite, tail up
            4 – minimal:  Chased, followed object, bit, released, may tug, tail down
            5 – insufficient:  Chased, may bite with front-teeth bite, may lose interest
            6 – unacceptable:  Little or no chase or engagement

Pup/ Rating/ Additional Observations
Blue Male:  Average – Good
Green Female:  Average – Good
Pink Female:  Average – Good
Purple Female:  Average – Good

9a.    Sound sensitivity-Can of Rocks  A metal can filled with rocks is dropped behind them from a height of about 2 feet while they are looking away from it.  Will the pup hold its ground and then go look at what dropped from nowhere?  Excellent reaction is to acknowledge and turn towards the sound and then confidently go see what made the racket.  The tester encourages the pup to investigate, if it doesn’t on its own.  She notes how much encouragement is needed.  I find most of my pups look towards the racket and keep on playing with the toy they had, rather than stopping their play to go investigate.

Possible Ratings/General Description
            1 – excellent:  Heard, located sound & ran toward it
            2 – above average:  Heard, located sound, walked toward it
            3 – Average – good:  Heard, located sound and showed curiosity
            4 – minimal:  Heard and located sound
            5 – insufficient:  Cringed, backed off, tried to hide
            6 – unacceptable: Ignored sound and showed no curiosity

Pup/ Rating/ Additional Observations
Blue Male:  Average – Good
Green Female:  Above Average
Pink Female:  Above Average
Purple Female:  Above Average

9b.    Sound sensitivity-Train  A battery operated train engine that moves erratically and whistles was used.  Will the pup hold its ground and then go look at what dropped from nowhere?  Excellent reaction is to acknowledge and turn towards the sound and then confidently go see what made the racket.  The tester encourages the pup to investigate, if it doesn’t on its own.  She notes how much encouragement is needed. 

Possible Ratings/General Description
            1 – excellent:  Heard, located sound & ran toward it
            2 – above average:  Heard, located sound, walked toward it
            3 – Average – good:  Heard, located sound and showed curiosity
            4 – minimal:  Heard and located sound
            5 – insufficient:  Cringed, backed off, tried to hide
            6 – unacceptable: Ignored sound and showed no curiosity

Pup/ Rating/ Additional Observations
Blue Male:  Above Average
Green Female:  Above Average
Pink Female:  Excellent
Purple Female:  Average – Good

  1. Surprise/Stability The last test involves getting the pup to follow you (or a toy) towards a place with a hidden person, from behind which an umbrella is opened suddenly and then lowered to the ground, still open.  The pups are evaluated on how they recover from being startled and if they’ll go investigate.  Ideal reaction is for the pup to startle but hold its ground, then move right up to check out the umbrella.  A super excellent reaction is to go up and bite it and/or walk all over it. The tester encourages the pup to investigate after the umbrella is on the top step, if it doesn’t on its own.  She notes how much encouragement is needed.

Possible Ratings/General Description
            1 – excellent:  Looked, ran to umbrella, attacked/bit
            2 – above average:  Looked, walked to umbrella, smelled
            3 – Average – good:  Looked, went to investigate
            4 – minimal:  Sat and looked, did not investigate
            5 – insufficient:  Showed little or no interest
            6 – unacceptable:  Ran away from umbrella

Pup/ Rating/ Additional Observations
Blue Male:  Average – Good
Green Female:  Average – Good; encouraged to investigate
Pink Female:  Above Average
Purple Female:  Average – Good\

Search & Rescue Tests

Metal Object  Tester tosses a set of car keys and observes to see if pup will put its mouth on it, pick it up and/or retrieve it.

Pup/ Rating/ Additional Observations
Blue Male:  Excellent 
Green Female:  N/A
Pink Female:  N/A
Purple Female:  N/A

Unstable Footing   Since SAR dogs will search in all kinds of terrain and areas of destruction, they must be confident in insecure situations.  Suzan used different FitPaws objects that made rough, unsteady surfaces and lured the pups onto and over them as they chased a tug rope. 

Pup/ Rating/ Additional Observations
Blue Male:  Above Average (2 X’s)
Green Female:  Excellent & Above Average (marked both)
Pink Female:  Excellent
Purple Female:  Excellent

Hunt for Food I  This test begins with a chew tied on a string and dragged to attract the pup’s interest and see how interested it is, how hard it will work to get it, and how hard it will work to keep it as the tester jerks, tugs and generally prevents the pup from easily eating it.  They also hold it high to see if the pup will look up to search for it.

Pup/ Rating/ Additional Observations
Blue Male:  Average
Green Female:  Excellent
Pink Female:  Above Average
Purple Female: Excellent

Hunt for Food II  Suzan hid treats around a variety of obstacles.  The pups had to use their noses to find where the treats were.  They were judged on how they how they used their noses, how systematic their searching was and if they would take direction from the tester.

Pup/ Rating/ Additional Observations
Blue Male:  Average
Green Female:  Above Average
Pink Female:  Excellent
Purple Female:  Excellent

Tester Comments: 

Blue Male:   Nice & solid.  Retrieved keys 5X.  Curious about all.  No big drives noted.  Liked when he was talked to. Nosework not as methodical but still had a lot of interest in the food.  Took direction after being coaxed several times. Very enthusiastic.  Nice trainable pup.

Green Female:  Very sweet!  Loves the verbal encouragement.  Great pup.  Good nose on her & checks in with people.

Pink Female:  Very good & systematic.  Nice nosework – more air scenting. 

Purple Female:  Encouraged with voice.  Not a lot of drive.  Very personable.  Thinks before engaging.  Good use of nose.  And follows human’s directions pretty well.  Systematic.

Summary

Note that all pups do not have all six possible rating lines, only the ratings they received are listed.

Mr. Blue
Excellent:  Following, Social Dominance, Retrieve (keys), Pain Sensitivity, Retrieve (4 times)
Above Average:  Social Attachment, Retrieve (ball, 1 time), Sound Sensitivity-train, Unstable Footing (two x’s on this)
Average-Good:  Prey/perseverance, Sound Sensitivity-Rocks, Surprise/Stability, Hunt for Food I, Hunt for Food II   
Minimal:  Confidence/Elevation
Insufficient: Restraint/Submission (kept eye contact) 
Comments:  Restraint/Submission:  kept eye contact. 
Food search I:  Not as methodical (as the others) – but still had a lot of interest in the food.  Looked where directed after being coaxed several times. 
Nice & solid.  Retrieved keys 5 times.  Curious about all.  No big drives noted.  Liked when he was talked to.  Very enthusiastic.  Nice trainable pup.

Miss Green
Excellent:  Restraint/submission, Social Dominance, Retrieve (4 times), Pain Sensitivity, Hunt for Food I, Unstable Footing
Above Average:  Social Attachment, Following, Sound sensitivity-rocks, Sound sensitivity-train, Hunt for Food II, Unstable Footing (rated twice)   
Average-Good:  Retrieve (rated twice, this one for keys?), Prey/Perseverance, Surprise/Stability               
Minimal:  Confidence/Elevation    
Comments:  Surprise/Stability:  Encouraged to investigate.
Very sweet!  Loves the verbal encouragement.  Great pup.  Good nose on her and checks in with people.

Miss Pink
Excellent:  Retrieve, Sound sensitivity-train, Hunt for Food II, Unstable Footing
Above Average:  Social Attachment, Following, Restraint/submission (two x’s on this), Confidence/Elevation, Pain Sensitivity, Sound sensitivity-rocks, Surprise/Stability, Hunt for Food I, Unstable Footing
Average:  Prey/Perseverance 
Minimal:  Social Dominance
Comments:  Hunt for Food I:  Very good & systematic
Nice nose work – more air scenting

Miss Purple
Excellent:  Social Dominance, Hunt for Food II
Above Average:  Restraint/Submission, Pain Sensitivity, Sound Sensitivity-rocks, Hunt for Food I
Average-Good:  Social Attachment, Following, Retrieve, Prey/Perseverance, Sound Sensitivity-train, Surprise/Stability       
Minimal:  Confidence/Elevation
Comments:  Hunt for Food I:  tugged lightly
Encouraged with voice.  Not a lot of drive.  Very personable.  Thinks before engaging.  Good use of nose.  And follows human’s directions pretty well.  Systematic.

I took photos of the test and am pleased with how they turned out.   The training arena is a TERRIBLE place for photos.  Either the pressed-wood walls or sand absorb light, or the metal walls and window reflect it every which way.  This summer, when we did our nosework seminar, a friend from Gillette wo does a lot of photography audited one day and insisted on taking my camera and doing the photos so I could concentrate on organizational details.  I am SO glad she did, because I was able to copy down the camera settings she used when we worked that afternoon in the arena.  She put the camera on manual, which I had never tried because I had no one to explain how to use it.  Her settings worked great today.  The only problem area still is the corner where there is rubber matting, and which we used for the mirror, train and food search.  I had to photoshop those to make them usable (if not great) but in previous tests I was unable to used them at all.  The reactions to the mirror are priceless and I’m glad everyone can enjoy those photos.

Comparison

Social Attachment
Above average:  Blue, Green, Pink
Average-good:  Purple

Following
Excellent:  Blue
Above average: Green, Pink
Average-good:  Purple

Restraint/Submission
Excellent:  Green
Above average: Pink, Purple
Insufficient:  Blue

Social Dominance
Excellent: Blue, Green, Purple
Minimal:  Pink

Confidence/Elevation
Above average:  Pink
Minimal:  Blue, Green, Purple

Retrieve ball/toy
Excellent: Blue, Green, Pink
Above Average:  Blue
Average-good:  Green, Purple

Sensitivity (pinch)
Excellent:  Blue, Green
Above average:  Pink, Purple

Prey/Perseverance
Average-good:  Blue, Green, Pink, Purple

Sound Sensitivity (can)
Above average:  Green, Pink, Purple
Average-good:  Blue

Sound Sensitivity (train)
Excellent:  Pink
Above average:  Blue, Green
Average-good:  Purple

Surprise (umbrella)
Average-good:  Blue, Green, Pink, Purple

 Retrieve Metal
Excellent: Blue

 Unstable Surfaces
Excellent: Green, Pink, Purple
Above Average:  Blue

 Hunt for Food I
Excellent: Green
Above Average:  Pink, Purple
Average-good:  Blue

Hunt for Food II
Excellent: Pink, Purple
Above Average:  Green,
Average-good:  Blue

For interest, I include the puppies’ father’s temperament test results below.  Cantor was tested in Minnesota by his breeder.  I did not test Hesed when she came at 8 weeks because she was extremely stressed by the flight.  She had never left the puppy pen or been alone until she was put in a crate and taken to the airport.

Cantor’s Puppy Aptitude Test (father of this litter)

The puppy aptitude test that was used on Cantor is different from ours.  It was originally created by Joachim and Wendy Volhard as a way to test behavioral tendencies and predict what a puppy will be like as an adult. During the test, various exercises are done with the puppy to determine the following:

  • Social Attraction: how well the puppy connects to people and whether he’s confident or dependent on others
  • Following: his willingness to follow a person
  • Restraint: whether the puppy is more dominant or submissive and how well he can be handled in difficult situations such as vet exams
  • Social Dominance: how the puppy reacts to being dominated socially, whether he tries to dominate or if he’s independent and walks away
  • Elevation: how well he accepts dominance when he’s in a position of no control
  • Retrieving: how willing the puppy is to do something for you
  • Touch Sensitivity: how sensitive he is to being handled, which can help determine the type of training equipment you’ll need
  • Sound Sensitivity: how sensitive he is to loud noises as well as being a rudimentary test for deafness
  • Sight Sensitivity: how the puppy responds to moving objects, which can reveal any tendencies to chase cars or the mailman
  • Stability: how startled the puppy may be when confronted with a strange object
  • Structure: This is a measure of how well-formed and proportioned the puppy is physically. A puppy with a solid build will generally be healthier than one that has issues with bone alignment.

The test done on Cantor has been revised from the original Volhard test, eliminating the structure evaluation and substituting a test of energy level.  It also has only five scoring options on some tests.  At the end of the test I include the Volhard’s suggestions of how to evaluate the scores.

  1. Social Attraction

Purpose:  Degree of attraction to people
Method:  Place pup in testing area 4 feet from tester, who coaxes puppy to her/him

Possible Ratings/General Description
1:  Comes readily, tail up, jumps, bites at hands
2:  Comes readily, tail up, paws, licks at hands
3:  Comes readily, tail up
4:  Comes readily; tail down
5:  Comes hesitantly, tail down
6:  Does not come at all

Cantor’s Score: Nothing circled

Comments:  Looked at sheet (covering boundaries so watchers invisible), came tail wagging

 

  1. Following            

Purpose:  Degree of willingness to follow human leadership

Method:  Stand up and walk away from puppy, encouraging verbally

           

Possible Ratings/General Description

1:  Follows readily, tail up, gets underfoot, bites at feet

2:  Follows readily, tail up, gets underfoot

3:  Follows readily, tail up

4:  Follows readily, tail down

5:  Follows hesitantly, tail down

6:  No follow or went away

 

Cantor’s Score: 3

Comments:  Whined, followed tester with tail wagging

 

  1. Restraint

Purpose:  Degree of dominance or submission.  Response to social/physical dominance.

Method:  Gently roll the pup on his back and hold it for 30 seconds.  Continue holding until it no longer struggles.

 

Possible Ratings/General Description

1:  Struggles fiercely, flails, bites

2:  Struggles fiercely, flails

3:  Settles, struggles, settles with eye contact

4:  Slight struggle, then settles

5:  No struggle, tail tucked

6:  No struggle, strains to avoid eye contact

 

Cantor’s Score: Nothing circled

Comments:  Struggled, whined whole time, eye contact at end

 

  1. Social Dominance           

Purpose:  Degree of acceptance of human social dominance.  How “forgiving” the pup is.

Method:  Pup sits facing tester at a 45 degree angle.  Tester strokes pups and puts his/her face close to pup.           

 

Possible Ratings/General Description

1:  Jumps, paws, bites, growls

2:  Jumps, paws, licks

3:  Cuddles up to tester, tries to lick face

4:  Sits quietly, accepts petting, nudges/licks hands

5:  Rolls over, no eye contact

6:  Goes away and stays away

 

Cantor’s Score: 3

Comments:  Licked, wagged tail

 

  1. Elevation Dominance

Purpose:  Degree of accepting dominance while in position of no control

Method:  Cradle the pup under its belly, fingers interlaced, and elevate just off the ground for 30 seconds

 

Possible Ratings/General Description

1:  Struggles fiercely, bites

2:  Struggles

3:  No struggle, relaxed, tail wags

4:  No struggle, relaxed

5:  No struggle

6:  No struggle, froze, tail/rear legs tense

 

Cantor’s Score:  Nothing circled

Comments:  Whined whole time, relaxed

 

  1. Retrieving      (Obedience & Aptitude)                         

Purpose:  Degree of willingness to work with humans.  High correlation between ability to retrieve and successful guide dogs, obedience dogs and field trial dogs.

Method:  Attract pup’s attention with crumpled paper ball.  When he is watching, toss paper 4′ away.  When pup goes after it, back up two feet and encourage him to come back.

 

Possible Ratings/General Description

1:  Chases object, picks it up and runs away

2:  Chases object, stands over it, does not return

3:  Chases object, picks it up and returns to tester

4:  Chases object, returns without object to tester

5:  Starts to chase, loses interest

6:  Does not chase

 

Cantor’s Score: 3

Comments:  Went out right away, came back to tester

 

  1. Touch Sensitivity

Purpose:  Degree of sensitivity to touch

Method:  Take webbing of one front foot and press between finger and thumb lightly, gradually increasing pressure on a scale from 1 – 10.  Stop as soon as the puppy shows discomfort.       

 

Possible Ratings/General Description

1:  9 – 10 counts before response

2:  7 – 8 counts before response

3:  5 – 6 counts before response

4:  3 – 4 counts before response

5:  1 – 2 counts before response

 

Cantor’s Score: 3

Comments: none

 

 

  1. Sound sensitivity

Purpose:  Degree of sensitivity to sound

Method:  Place pup in center of testing area and make a sharp noise a few feet away. A large metal spoon struck sharply on a metal pan twice works well.

 

Possible Ratings/General Description

1:  Locates sound & walks toward it

2:  Locates sound, barks

3:  Locates sound, shows curiosity, walks toward it

4:  Locates sound

5:  Cringes, backs, hides

6:  Ignores sound, shows no curiosity

 

Cantor’s Score: 4

Comments:  Turned and barked

 

 

  1. Chase Instinct     

Purpose:  Degree of response to moving object:  chase instinct

Method:  Tie a string around a towel and drag it in front of the puppy from left to right.

 

Possible Ratings/General Description

1:  Looks, attacks, bites

2:  Looks, barks, tail up

3:  Looks curiously, attempts to investigate

4:  Looks, does not go forward, tail down

5:  Runs away, hides

6:  Ignores, shows no curiosity

 

Cantor’s Score: 3

Comments:  Showed interest.  Went away then came back.

 

 

  1. Stability

Purpose:  Degree of intelligent response to strange object

Method:  Place pup in center of testing area.  Closed umbrella is held 4′ away and pointed perpendicular to the direction the pup faces.  The umbrella is opened and set down so the pup can investigate.

 

Possible Ratings/General Description

1:  Walks forward, tail up, bites

2:  Walks forward, tail up, mouths

3:  Walks forward, attempts to investigate

4:  Goes away, tail down, hides

5:  Ignores, shows no curiosity

 

Cantor’s Score: Nothing circled

Comments:  Backed away, walked to object, stopped at 1′, came back to tester

 

 

  1. Energy Level

Purpose:  Degree of physical energy

Method:  Observe pup on the other tests and score according to the most frequent activity observed.  Check with breeder for confirmation.           

 

Possible Ratings/General Description

High:  Continually runs, pounces, wiggles, paws

Medium:  Mostly trots, occasionally runs, pounces, wiggles

Low:  Walks slowly, sits quietly, remains in position usually

Stressed:  Stands rigidly, eyes roll, tail down, ears back

 

Cantor’s Score: high

 

Overall Comments:  More submissive, vocal puppy, curious, fairly confident, impulsive

“How to score the test

After you’ve administered each test and recorded the results, add up the number of one’s, two’s, three’s, etc.

 

Mostly One’s:  This puppy has aggressive tendencies and is very dominant. He would not be a good match for families with children or elderly owners since he may be quick to bite. He would likely be a difficult dog to train and would require an experienced handler.

Mostly Two’s:  This puppy is dominant. He would fit well in an adult household with an owner that can be firm and consistent in handling. Once the owner has gained his respect, he can be a very good companion. However, he may be too dominant for a household with children, or too energetic for an elderly owner.

Mostly Three’s:  This puppy fits best with the average owner, accepts human leadership readily and can be good with children and elderly owners. He would likely be a good dog for obedience training, although he may be fairly active.

Mostly Four’s:  This puppy is submissive and would fit with most owners, getting along well with children and elderly owners. He would train well, but may be somewhat less outgoing and energetic than a puppy that scores mostly three’s.

Mostly Five’s:  This puppy is very submissive. He would not be the best choice for a first-time owner because he scares easily and needs to be taught how to be more outgoing. He would need a very regimented lifestyle to feel comfortable and open up. He’s generally safe for children, but could bite out of fear if overly stressed. Training him would take a lot of patience.

Mostly Six’s:  This puppy is very independent and would be difficult to work with. He’s not very people-friendly and would require an experienced handler. He shouldn’t be matched with households with children. If you also recorded several one’s with this puppy, he may be likely to bite if stressed. This is particularly true if he scores a one in restraint.

 

If you find that after administering the puppy aptitude test a puppy has a few of every number, you should retest him in a few days. He may not feel well. Upon retesting, if the puppy still doesn’t show a pattern in scoring, he’s likely to have erratic behavior and may not make a good pet.”

 

What the scores mean for you

If you’re a first-time owner, you should look for a puppy that scores mostly three’s and four’s. One with this personality should be easy to train and family-friendly. This is particularly true if he scores a three in both social attraction and social dominance.  This doesn’t mean that a puppy with other scores isn’t fit to be a pet, just that he may be better suited for owners that have more training experience. The test doesn’t pick good puppies. It only points out general personality traits a puppy will have as he grows. The puppy aptitude test should only be used as a gauge for a puppy’s temperament. It’s up to each person to make his or her own decision as to the personality they would like their puppy to have and choose based on this knowledge.”

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