Clicker
by Tona
Clicker or Cricket app simulate real life clicker device
App Name | Clicker |
---|---|
Developer | Tona |
Category | Music & Audio |
Download Size | 14 MB |
Latest Version | 1.5 |
Average Rating | 0.00 |
Rating Count | 0 |
Google Play | Download |
AppBrain | Download Clicker Android app |
Clicker or Cricket app simulate real life clicker device
Uses:
- Use in animal training
Clicker training
Clickers were first used by marine mammal trainer Karen Pryor as a way of communicating with their animals. Dolphins and whales communicate underwater through a series of clicks and whistles known as echolocation, and the clicker allowed a trainer to produce signals they were more likely to understand.
Nowadays, clickers are used to train all kinds of animals, most commonly dogs. When associated with a treat, a click allows the owner to mark the precise moment the desired behavior is executed.
Other use
- In contemporary society, clickers are often used by pet owners (particularly dogs and Gambian pouched rats) as a behavioral tool.
- Clickers are used to provide audible feedback for human students learning using a method called TAGteach.
- Clickers are also used as a handheld counting device, sometimes digital but more commonly mechanical, used to keep a count of the numbers of people entering a venue.
- A Clicker is a device used on recurve bows to signal to the archer that correct draw length has been achieved, thus aiding consistency.
- emulate the buzzers sound.
What is Clicker ?
A clicker, sometimes called a cricket, is device that makes a clicking sound, usually when deliberately activated by its user.
They usually consist of a piece of thin metal or plastic held in a casing so that the metal is slightly torqued; depressing one end of the metal causes it to pop out of alignment and releasing it causes it to pop back into alignment, each time making a sharp click.
With some clickers, the user depresses the metal directly with thumb or finger; with others, a button extends above the surface of the casing so that depressing the button makes the metal click.
Uses:
- Use in animal training
Clicker training
Clickers were first used by marine mammal trainer Karen Pryor as a way of communicating with their animals. Dolphins and whales communicate underwater through a series of clicks and whistles known as echolocation, and the clicker allowed a trainer to produce signals they were more likely to understand.
Nowadays, clickers are used to train all kinds of animals, most commonly dogs. When associated with a treat, a click allows the owner to mark the precise moment the desired behavior is executed.
Other use
- In contemporary society, clickers are often used by pet owners (particularly dogs and Gambian pouched rats) as a behavioral tool.
- Clickers are used to provide audible feedback for human students learning using a method called TAGteach.
- Clickers are also used as a handheld counting device, sometimes digital but more commonly mechanical, used to keep a count of the numbers of people entering a venue.
- A Clicker is a device used on recurve bows to signal to the archer that correct draw length has been achieved, thus aiding consistency.
- emulate the buzzers sound.
What is Clicker ?
A clicker, sometimes called a cricket, is device that makes a clicking sound, usually when deliberately activated by its user.
They usually consist of a piece of thin metal or plastic held in a casing so that the metal is slightly torqued; depressing one end of the metal causes it to pop out of alignment and releasing it causes it to pop back into alignment, each time making a sharp click.
With some clickers, the user depresses the metal directly with thumb or finger; with others, a button extends above the surface of the casing so that depressing the button makes the metal click.