LifestyleEven your dog listens: New study reveals hidden canine comprehension

Even your dog listens: New study reveals hidden canine comprehension

The journal "Animal Cognition" published a surprising study showing that dogs... are eavesdropping on us. Moreover, they can read between the lines!

Scientists agree - dogs understand more than we thought.
Scientists agree - dogs understand more than we thought.
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The American weekly "Newsweek" cited studies conducted by animal experts. Scientists from English and French universities joined forces. The research group decided to see how much of human speech and behavior dogs understand. The results of their observations were surprising.

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If we systematically work with a dog, we can teach it many commands. The appropriate intonation with which we address the dog is very important. Pets respond to their names with no problem. But can they understand more? Scientists investigated this by conducting tests on a group of 50 dogs of different breeds. What exactly did their actions involve?

Specialists checked whether a dog would pay attention if its name was mentioned in a sentence, even if we were not speaking directly to it or using any specific intonation. Scientists recorded dog owners uttering two phrases. The first contained the dog's name and the command "come now!" and the second included the dog's name with the phrase "give me coffee." Both sentences were recorded in two versions: with appropriate intonation and accent, and without.

It quickly became apparent that dogs reacted more often to sentences with the appropriate intonation. They also responded when the sentence was spoken in a neutral tone but contained the dog's name. Moreover, scientists found that dogs' ability to recognize speech might also be associated with the pauses their owners made during their utterances.

They understand more than it seems

English and French scientists noticed something else—dogs have a particularly sensitive ear for human speech in general. Even if we don't use the pet's name or any specific intonation during a conversation, the dog still processes what we say. Previously, it was thought that only humans had this ability.

- The fact that basic verbal information can be perceived by a species that does not speak either indicates that human speech exploits perceptual abilities present in other mammals, or that dogs have a special ear for human speech as a consequence of domestication - emphasized David Reby, the head of the described study and a professor from the University of Sussex.

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