Let’s talk about Nightjars

elodieunderglass:

fictions-stranger:

simonalkenmayer:

thantos1991:

anubianpagan:

ironfoxe:

birdstoconsider:

they are these wonderful tiny predatory birds

image

With great camouflage for multiple environments

image
image

And lovely plumage dependent on their species

image
image
image
image

BUT BEST OF ALL IS THEIR MOUTHS, which look small then their beaks are closed (they’ve even got cute lil’ whiskers!)

image

BUT ARE ACTUALLY HUUUUGE

image
image
image

BEST BIRD

i am here for this bird

WHAT IS THIS ELDRITCH HORROR!!!

I’ll call it Simon, here @simonalkenmayer

Hahahahaha i like him well!

@elodieunderglass

Yom yom yom

mapsontheweb:

Subway-style diagram of major Roman roads.

After the Romans departed, systematic construction of paved highways in the UK did not resume until the early 18th century. The Roman road network remained the only nationally-managed highway system within Britain until the establishment of the Ministry of Transport in the early 20th century.
(Source)

santorumsoakedpikachu:

slashmarks:

A lot of dog training stuff is really hard for me to read. I recognize, intimately, both the tactics used by trainers and the reactions recorded by them from their dogs, from my own experiences as a child and teenager – in the place of the dog. They were not positive experiences for me, and I am doubtful that animals who are displaying the exact same reactions to the exact same stimuli are happier about it.

Like, I’ve experienced constant rewards on the basis of whether I’m focusing on someone else for long periods of time. It does work on humans, despite our complex brains. It’s probably just as effective on us as on dogs, honestly – which is not surprising, since “clicker training” was initially developed for use on marine mammals. (It has since been decried as cruel in that context.)

It’s horrible. It left me with severe PTSD. It’s been years since I got out of that situation, and I’m only sort of recovered. The rewards and constant demands for focus were much more traumatizing than being hit was.

I don’t think we have a good idea of what ways of teaching are non-traumatizing for dogs; and I do think that we have to do something for them to live with us safely; and that because of their numbers and degree of domestication the only realistic options are living with us or not at all.

I do think that we can safely assume that being ‘on’ all the time is stressful.

(Yes, I know many dogs display positive emotions and appear happy and eager during training and this kind of thing. So did I.

You’re rewarding the happiness as much as the behavior, for one; and once you’re used to this kind of thing, you are eager for it – because being rewarded tells you you haven’t done something wrong. The rest of the time is a kind of constant gnawing anxiety that you’re misbehaving. As a result, it tends to produce constant attention and physical proximity, with the dog/child constantly monitoring your emotional state and actions, and growing slightly frantic if prevented from doing that or denied positive reinforcement.

The positive reinforcement results in a temporary relief from the anxiety, which feels intensely pleasurable for a brief period before the anxiety comes back. So, you seem happy and excited; it’s the result of a constant and erratic back and forth between pleasure and fear.)

#it’s also worth pointing out that all of this is based on behavioral theories of cognition #which are a) totally outdated and disroven #and b) associated with horrific ethical breaches because they involve the idea that there is no autonomy or internality in animals #and consequently combine a sense of freedom from ethics in the reesarcher with a lack of concern for the wellbeing of the researched upon #they’re currently used mostly for torturing autistic kids

slashmarks:

(please note: this post is about dog training. I care about autistic people and abuse survivors, being both, but this is not a post about those issues; it is about using the experiences of people who’ve been through behavioralist training and can tell us about it to interpret the experiences of dogs, who cannot.)

Basically, the goal of behavioralist training methods – whether used on dogs, dolphins or people – is to cut out or deny the role of the brain in decision making, reducing behavior to responses to external cues; behaviors that receive a good response should keep happening or happen when cued, behaviors that receive a bad response should stop. The only context is the cue – no emotions and no internal motivations, let alone conscious decision or thought.

I don’t think this is entirely possible, but you can get pretty far. A lot of autistic adults, and abuse survivors subject to less scientific versions of this spectrum of training methods, talk about being cue dependent – having difficulty initiating actions without an external cue or without being told to by someone else; or conversely, having difficulty not responding to a cue given intentionally or by accident in a way that resembles an old training cue.

(For a while, I had trouble in social situations because if the person I was talking to implied an expected answer I would automatically give it without having time to stop and think, and sometimes that meant I was lying. Fortunately, I’ve been out of my mother’s house for three and a half years now, and this particular problem is mostly gone.)

Interestingly, there are a number of studies that demonstrate that punishment and reward reduce intrinsic motivation (here’s a pop science article rounding them up). This has long been known – if perhaps not consciously – by behavioralist trainers, who sometimes extinguish a behavior by teaching it in response to the cue, and then never giving the cue; when done correctly, the animal or child will never produce the behavior autonomously.

(When I discussed this with my girlfriend a while ago, she mentioned that a behavioral problem seen in some protection trained dogs is biting in response to certain movements as though they can’t tell the difference between a person and a bite cushion.

It’s hard to say exactly what’s going on in a dog’s head, because we can’t talk to them and our understanding of their behavior is filtered through a mesh of body language differences, rewards and punishments for emotional expressions and communication, and their utter dependence on us. That said, I was pretty horrified by the implication that they may know they’re hurting people and be involuntarily biting anyway, unable to stop. I’ve been there, though thankfully not in a context involving assault.)

Obviously, we can’t allow dogs utter autonomy and still live with them, but dogs are living creatures who need some amount of autonomy the same way we do, and I think it’s worth considering whether we’re infringing on it because we need to, or because we think it’s fun, or it scores us dog trainer cred. Minimizing harm is sometimes all we can do.

I am still trying to decide what I think the best ways of doing that are. I think that requiring constant attention or focus is probably bad; that good enough to live with should be allowed to be good enough in regards to obedience training for non-working dogs; and that “extra” recreational activities such as dog sports should be chosen with an eye to things the dog is enthusiastic about initially, and things that involve decision making on the part of the dog.

sheisrecovering:

Your abuser’s trauma does not justifiy them abusing you.
Your abuser’s disability does not justify them abusing you.
Your abuser’s gender does not justify them abusing you.
Your abuser’s illness does not justify them abusing you.

For everyone that needs to hear this: there is nothing you could ever do that’s punishable by abuse, and there is NOTHING anyone could ever say to justify the abuse you experience(d).

article about an Autism Research™ with small sample size that was entirely boys: Scientists Have Found Where Autism Hides in the Brain
my autistic ass: autism lurks in the dark corners of your brain, ready to strike at any moment