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🐕 Dog — Minimal RTT Teaching Substrate (Ready to Paste)

# Dog — Minimal RTT Teaching Substrate

## 1. Primary Sensory Channels
- Olfaction (dominant; social and environmental gradients)
- Auditory cues (tone, rhythm, human vocal patterns)
- Vision (motion, gesture, facial expression)
- Tactile cues (pressure, contact, leash feedback)
- Social-emotional cues (affect, synchrony, attention)

## 2. How Dogs Detect Coherence
- Stable vocal patterns (command → pause → command)
- Predictable gesture sequences (hand → body → release)
- Consistent spatial paths (heel → turn → heel)
- Repeating tactile cues (light pressure → release)
- Regular social rhythms (attention → action → praise)

## 3. How Dogs Detect Drift
- A vocal cue that shifts tone or cadence
- A gesture that breaks sequence or timing
- A spatial path that deviates unexpectedly
- A tactile cue that changes pressure or duration
- A social-emotional mismatch (tone vs. posture)

## 4. Minimal RTT Teaching Protocol

### Step 1 — Present a Stable Pattern (Coherence)
Provide a consistent cue:
- a simple vocal pattern (“sit” → pause → “sit”)
- a predictable gesture (hand up → still)
- a stable spatial routine (walk → stop → walk)
- a repeating tactile cue (light leash pressure)

### Step 2 — Introduce a Controlled Deviation (Drift)
Alter one variable:
- shift tone or timing of the vocal cue
- change the gesture angle slightly
- adjust the spatial path (small deviation)
- vary leash pressure briefly

### Step 3 — Allow the Dog to Restore Coherence (Pull)
Offer a clear interaction point:
- performing the expected action to reset the cue
- aligning with the gesture to restore sequence
- returning to heel position to correct spatial drift
- responding to tactile feedback to re-establish pattern

Dogs naturally correct drift because they are social-coherence specialists.

### Step 4 — Reward the Restoration of Coherence
Reward the *pattern correction*, not the specific action:
- verbal praise or treat
- release of pressure
- immediate restoration of the stable pattern

### Step 5 — Shift Modalities (Balance)
Move from:
- vocal → gesture
- gesture → spatial
- spatial → tactile
- tactile → mixed cues

Dogs generalize coherence across modalities through social synchrony and emotional attunement.

## 5. Notes on Scaling RTT for Dogs
- Dogs are social learners; coherence is often emotional and relational.
- Drift detection is strongest in vocal tone, gesture timing, and spatial alignment.
- RTT maps extremely well because dogs track human intention through multi-modal cues.
- Their “Pull” action is often repositioning, gesture matching, or emotional alignment.

🧭 MID INTELLIGENCE TIER#

🐕 Dog#

  • Regimes Perceived: Social‑emotional, vocal, spatial, olfactory‑gradient.
  • Regimes Missed by Humans: Their awareness of human intention drift before it’s expressed.
  • Perspective: Dogs remind us that synchrony is a regime built from trust.

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