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  2. Invisible Fence Inc. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invisible_Fence_Inc.

    Manufactured and distributed by Radio System Corporation, the company sells wireless and fenceless systems that were first introduced in 1973. [1] Its best-known product consists of an underground wire and a collar with an integrated transmitter that provides a signal to the pet when it approaches the perimeter. [citation needed]

  3. Pet fence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pet_fence

    Other pet fences are wireless. Rather than using an underground wire, they emit a radio signal from a central unit, and activate when the pet travels beyond a certain radius from the unit. In another type, the collar uses GPS signals to determine proximity to a predetermined "virtual fence", without the need for any physical installation at all.

  4. I Tried Tavo's New Pet Protection System and It's Everything ...

    www.aol.com/tried-tavos-pet-protection-system...

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  5. Pet product company founded by Randy Boyd files lawsuit ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/pet-product-company-founded-randy...

    Both Radio Systems Corp. and PAWS offer GPS-based pet containment systems that use a GPS receiver collar designed to keep a dog inside a perimeter defined using a mobile app, the complaint states.

  6. Shock collar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shock_collar

    A typical shock collar. Shock collar used on a riot police dog in 2004 in Würzburg.Two years later, [1] Germany banned the use of shock collars, even by police. [2]A shock collar or remote training collar, also known as an e-collar, Ecollar, or electronic collar, is a type of training collar that delivers shocks to the neck of a dog [3] to change behavior.

  7. Remote control animal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remote_control_animal

    Several studies have examined the remote control of rats using micro-electrodes implanted into their brains and rely on stimulating the reward centre of the rat. Three electrodes are implanted; two in the ventral posterolateral nucleus of the thalamus which conveys facial sensory information from the left and right whiskers, and a third in the medial forebrain bundle which is involved in the ...

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