The Constructional Approach to Zoo Animal Training: Enhancing Welfare Through Emerging Evidence-Based Behavioral Science
Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Key Concepts and Definitions
2. Introduction
- Identifying behavior challenges without judgment: Rather than labeling animals’ behaviors as “problems”, “maladaptive”, or “abnormal”, the constructional approach recognizes that challenging behaviors are often competent responses to difficult circumstances [9]. As Goldiamond [4] noted, “What is considered pathology may also be defined as a competent operant, maintained by the environmental reinforcers it produces, but presently (or foreseeably) producing these at high cost” (p. 158). For zoo animals, this perspective allows caregivers to view stereotypic behaviors, non-compliance, aggression, or fear responses as logical outcomes of specific contingencies rather than as flaws in the animal. Throughout this paper, commonly used descriptive terms such as “aggressive behavior”, “fear”, or “non-compliance” are retained for clarity and accessibility to zoo professionals; however, they are used descriptively rather than judgmentally and are understood within a constructional framework as behaviors maintained by identifiable functional contingencies.
- Building empathy: The constructional approach fosters a deeper understanding of animals’ perspectives by examining the contingencies that maintain behavior. This shifts caregivers from asking “How do we stop this behavior?” to “What does this animal need, and what alternative ways can we provide to meet those needs?” This empathy—understanding that behavior makes sense in context—leads to more effective and less coercive interventions.
- Taking action to enhance well-being: Rather than using extinction, punishment, or other aversive procedures that may temporarily suppress behavior but cause additional distress, the constructional approach actively builds repertoires that give animals access to critical reinforcers through multiple pathways. This proactive stance on enhancing well-being aligns with how compassion is enacted.
- Outlining the core principles and historical development of the constructional approach
- Distinguishing it from traditional animal training methodologies
- Presenting evidence of its effectiveness through case examples
- Providing practical recommendations for implementation in zoo settings
- Discussing how the approach aligns with evolving conceptions of animal welfare, including compassionate care practices
3. Materials and Methods
4. Theoretical Framework and Development of the Constructional Approach
4.1. Contemporary Context and Historical Origins
4.2. Five Critical Elements of the Constructional Approach
- Terminal Repertoire: Identifying “where you want to go from here”—the ultimate behavioral goal.
- Current Relevant Repertoire: Assessing “where you are now”—the existing behavioral skills and patterns.
- Change Procedures: Determining “how you can get there”—the specific training techniques to be employed.
- Maintaining Consequences: Establishing “what would keep you going”—the natural reinforcers that will sustain the behavior.
- Progress Monitoring: Deciding “how you will know where you are along the way”—the metrics for evaluating success.
4.3. Key Distinguishing Features
4.3.1. Building vs. Eliminating Behavior
4.3.2. Nonlinear Contingency Analysis (NCA)
- Multiple environmental factors
- Competing contingencies
- Costs and benefits of different behavioral options
- Emotional components of behavioral patterns
4.3.3. Appropriate Application of Reinforcement
4.3.4. Degrees of Freedom and Assent
- Identify the critical consequences maintaining the animal’s responding.
- Ensure the behaviors available to the animal are within its learned repertoire and can be emitted under the current conditions.
- Offer multiple behaviors that can access the same reinforcing outcome.
- Verify that the available options provide genuinely equivalent reinforcing outcomes under current conditions.
- The topography of the behavior (what the behavior looks like) does not provide enough information to indicate coercion or cooperation. Giving the animal genuine alternative options provides more information.
Constructional Approaches to Addressing Fear Responses
4.3.5. Emotions as Contingency Descriptors
5. Applications of the Constructional Approach in Zoo Settings
5.1. Research Evidence
- Katz and Rosales-Ruiz [21] utilized a constructional approach to successfully address behaviors commonly labeled as fear in shelter dogs, demonstrating a method for teaching animals that displayed avoidance responses to approach and interact with novel people.
- Fernandez [14] employed negative reinforcement shaping procedures to transform petting zoo sheep that exhibited behaviors typically described as fearful into animals that would approach and allow contact from humans. This research demonstrated that recognizing and working with the functional reinforcers maintaining behavior (distance from humans) provided a foundation for establishing more affiliative human–animal interactions.
- McGee’s [22] research shows that participation in positive reinforcement-based teaching may still be coerced if no alternative ways to access reinforcement are available. By increasing degrees of freedom and offering meaningful alternatives, critical consequences can be revealed, and caregivers can better assess whether an animal’s participation reflects genuine assent.
- Snider [10] developed a Constructional Canine Aggression Treatment that uses shaping with negative reinforcement to effectively increase desired responses without the use of punishment or extinction.
- Rentfro [11] adapted similar methodologies for domestic cats, creating what was termed a “Fearful to Friendly” protocol with applications for felids in zoological collections.
5.2. Practical Applications in Zoo Settings
5.2.1. Medical and Husbandry Training
5.2.2. Creating Communication Pathways
5.2.3. Addressing Challenging Environmental Conditions
5.3. Addressing Fear and Aggressive Behavior
5.3.1. Key Principles in Addressing Fear and Aggressive Responses
5.3.2. Transforming Fear and Aggressive Responses
- Stand well outside the habitat boundary and remain stationary at a distance where animals exhibited vigilance but no withdrawal behaviors.
- When any individual displayed behaviors indicative of decreased vigilance (such as lowering the head, relaxing the ears, or shifting weight), the caregiver would take a step back, reinforcing calmer emotional behaviors with additional distance.
- This process was repeated, shaping a wide repertoire of progressively calmer behaviors in the presence of humans.
- Throughout the process, animals consistently had access to an adjacent yard, providing an additional opportunity to increase distance from caregivers if desired, thereby ensuring that escape remained a viable and meaningful behavioral option.
5.3.3. Common Principles Across Applications
- Utilizing NCA: Applying a systems-oriented framework to identify the full range of contingencies, maintaining behavior, including overlapping, competing, and superimposed arrangements, ensures interventions are grounded in the actual functional relations at work. This comprehensive analysis allows practitioners to see beyond superficial behavior patterns and understand the full matrix of contingencies that maintain them.
- Working With Functional Reinforcers: Designing interventions that directly contact and use the reinforcers maintaining the animal’s current behavior, rather than superimposing unrelated contingencies. This principle acknowledges that functional reinforcers reveal valuable information about what matters to the animal and uses this information constructively rather than working against it.
- Initiating Interventions Under Appropriate Stimulus Conditions: Effective interventions begin under stimulus conditions where the animal can emit desired behavioral responses. This principle acknowledges that accessing desired outcomes requires starting with conditions that ideally do not occasion unwanted responses. By carefully establishing an initial baseline in which desired responses are observed, constructional practitioners can systematically shape new repertoires through gradual approximations, while ensuring the animal retains the option to use the behavior that has historically produced successful outcomes, even if that behavior is not the caregiver’s preferred response.
- Providing Degrees of Freedom: Creating multiple ways for animals to access important outcomes enhances welfare and intervention effectiveness. Degrees of freedom serve multiple functions:
- They provide a measure of coercion, revealing when animals have genuine choice versus when they are effectively forced into particular response patterns
- They generate critical information about the animal’s preferences, abilities, and emotional state
- They indicate when behaviors might be too difficult or aversive for the animal
- They mitigate frustration, aggression, and fear by ensuring alternative pathways to reinforcement
- They allow animals to effectively communicate “no” or “I’m uncertain” without missing reinforcement opportunities
- They can reveal additional reinforcers operating in the environment, such as social reinforcement or the inherent reinforcing properties of learning and participation
- Building Repertoires with Genuine Assent: Rather than using restraint, punishment, or other coercive techniques that may temporarily suppress behavior but cause additional distress, constructional approaches build behavioral repertoires that allow animals to participate in their care with genuine assent. This principle recognizes that behavior change achieved through compulsion or coercion often produces emotional side effects and is less durable than change built on a foundation of choice and functional contingencies. The speed with which animals often transform their behavior patterns under constructional programs demonstrates the effectiveness of this compassionate approach to behavior change.
5.3.4. Compassionate Framework Across Applications
- Identifying Challenging Behaviors Without Judgment: Rather than labeling animals’ responses as “problematic”, “aggressive”, or “non-compliant”, constructional interventions recognize these behaviors as competent strategies for navigating difficult conditions. Whether a gorilla avoiding a closing door or a muskox charging a fence, each behavior is understood as the product of specific contingencies rather than a flaw within the individual. This nonjudgmental perspective creates conditions for effective intervention without blame or coercion.
- Building Empathy by Analyzing Contingencies from the Animal’s Perspective: Using NCA, constructional practitioners identify the critical outcomes that are meaningful to the animal, such as distance from aversive stimuli, access to social companions, or opportunities for preferred sensory experiences such as touch, sound, or visual engagement. This shift from asking “How do we stop this behavior?” to “What desirable outcomes are maintaining this behavior?” was evident in cases such as the sheep who sought goat companionship and the rhinoceros for whom multiple reinforcement pathways were constructed. Through this process, interventions are organized around the animal’s needs and perspectives, rather than human convenience.
- Taking Action to Build Behavioral Repertoires That Enhance Well-Being: The interventions consistently created conditions in which animals could build new repertoires that provided multiple paths to access critical reinforcers. From the parrot flock that transitioned from fearful avoidance to eagerly approaching, to the tiger that learned to engage comfortably with a previously aversive caregiver, these case studies illustrate how constructional programs create genuine choice through increased degrees of freedom. By expanding, rather than suppressing, behavioral options, the constructional approach enhances animal well-being while building steady progress towards training goals.
6. Implementation in Zoo Settings
6.1. Practical Entry Points for Individual Practitioners
- Focus on Building Repertoires: Define training goals in terms of what desirable behaviors the animal should learn to emit, rather than focusing on stopping undesired behaviors. Ask, “What does this animal need to learn to do instead?”
- Use Reinforcement Based on Functional Contingency Assessment: Deliver reinforcement based on an understanding of the critical consequences maintaining behavior, not on procedural hierarchies or personal preference. Recognize when an animal’s responding indicates that negative reinforcement (access to distance) or positive reinforcement (access to appetitive stimuli) is maintaining behavior, and design interventions accordingly.
- Start Under Conditions That Support Desired Responses: Arrange stimulus conditions so that animals are likely to emit desired behaviors from the beginning of the training process. Prevent conditions that might lead practitioners to rely on the use of extinction, DRI/DRA, exposure therapies, or punishment procedures and avoid their use altogether, as they can produce emotional distress and unsustainable outcomes.
- Incorporate Genuine Choice, Honor Ongoing Assent, and Increase Degrees of Freedom: Design training contexts so that animals have multiple ways to access critical reinforcers, thereby providing genuine choice [15]. To honor assent, ensure that animals have more than one functional behavioral path to critical outcomes, not only at the start of an interaction but maintained throughout the training process. Ongoing availability of multiple access options is essential for assent to remain valid and for interventions to align with constructional principles [42,44].
- Address Emotional Welfare by Modifying Contingencies: Rather than attempting to directly counter-condition or extinguish emotional responses, change the contingencies that occasion the behavior. For example, if fear or aggressive behaviors are observed, arrange conditions (such as distance) to reinforce calm emotional responding [28,49].
6.2. Strategies for Organization-Level Implementation
- Comprehensive Staff Training: Provide training in constructional principles to all animal care staff, focusing on the application of NCA, repertoire building, and degrees of freedom, rather than merely procedural teaching.
- Protocol Review Through a Constructional Lens: Evaluate and revise existing training and husbandry protocols to shift from reduction-based strategies to constructional, repertoire-building practices.
- Behavior-Based Welfare Monitoring: Develop welfare assessment tools that measure observable indicators of emotional behaviors, degrees of freedom, and repertoire expansion rather than relying solely on the absence of problem behaviors.
- Collaborative Learning and Professional Development: Encourage participation in constructional training communities, academic resources, learning platforms, and other professional forums that support continued education and dialog on the constructional approach.
- Case Study Documentation and Sharing: Document constructional interventions and share case studies within and beyond the organization. Systematic documentation not only strengthens internal learning but also contributes to the advancement of best practices across the zoo and aquarium community.
7. Benefits of the Constructional Approach
- Enhanced Welfare Outcomes: By focusing on building desirable behavioral repertoires rather than eliminating undesired behaviors, animals experience greater agency, reduced stress, and improved emotional well-being.
- Expanded Behavioral Skills: Animals develop broader and more flexible repertoires, increasing their ability to navigate complex and dynamic environments.
- Compassionate, Welfare-Centered Management: The constructional approach avoids reductive procedures, promotes genuine choice, and aligns with public expectations for ethical and evidence-based animal care practices.
- Individualized Interventions: Rather than relying on generalized recipes, practitioners apply NCA to create customized interventions tailored to the needs of each animal.
- Reduction in Emotional Fallout: By increasing degrees of freedom, the approach minimizes the emotional side effects often associated with extinction, punishment, and coercive methods.
- Improved Staff Safety: Addressing aggressive and fear-based behavior at the functional contingencies level improves staff safety without relying on compulsion or suppression.
- Strengthened Human–Animal Relationships: Prioritizing understanding of functional contingencies fosters more profound empathy and creates relationships based on genuine assent and enhanced communication.
Future Learning and Continued Growth
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Correction Statement
Abbreviations
| NCA | Nonlinear Contingency Analysis |
| CET | Constructional Exposure Therapy |
| DRA | Differential Reinforcement of Alternative Behavior |
| DRI | Differential Reinforcement of Incompatible Behavior |
| ABC | Antecedent Behavior Consequence |
| EAZA | European Association of Zoos and Aquaria |
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| Emotion | Contingency Description |
|---|---|
| Fear | A distancing contingency where moving away from an aversive stimulus is maintained by negative reinforcement. |
| Anger/Aggression | A distancing contingency where driving an aversive stimulus away is maintained by negative reinforcement. |
| Panic | A nonspecific distancing contingency where the animal moves away from an aversive stimulus, maintained by negative reinforcement. |
| Anticipation/Interest | A nearing contingency maintained by positive reinforcement. |
| Conflict/Hesitation | Competing contingencies where both positive and negative reinforcement are operating simultaneously. |
| Anxiety/Stress | Competing contingencies where the animal lacks the behavioral repertoire or skills to effectively access positive reinforcement, resulting in a negative reinforcement contingency. |
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Heidenreich, B.; Pedersen, A. The Constructional Approach to Zoo Animal Training: Enhancing Welfare Through Emerging Evidence-Based Behavioral Science. Animals 2025, 15, 3221. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani15213221
Heidenreich B, Pedersen A. The Constructional Approach to Zoo Animal Training: Enhancing Welfare Through Emerging Evidence-Based Behavioral Science. Animals. 2025; 15(21):3221. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani15213221
Chicago/Turabian StyleHeidenreich, Barbara, and Annette Pedersen. 2025. "The Constructional Approach to Zoo Animal Training: Enhancing Welfare Through Emerging Evidence-Based Behavioral Science" Animals 15, no. 21: 3221. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani15213221
APA StyleHeidenreich, B., & Pedersen, A. (2025). The Constructional Approach to Zoo Animal Training: Enhancing Welfare Through Emerging Evidence-Based Behavioral Science. Animals, 15(21), 3221. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani15213221

