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Dogs really do understand that words stand for objects

Pet dogs have different patterns of brain activity when they are shown an object that doesn鈥檛 match the word they hear, suggesting they have a mental representation of what words mean

By James Woodford

22 March 2024

Dogs can learn the names of objects

骋辞谤辞诲别苍办辞蹿蹿/厂丑耻迟迟别谤蝉迟辞肠办鈥

Dogs seem to understand that words represent specific objects, recordings of their brain activity suggest.

Although some dogs can fetch a wide range of different objects on command, few do well on such tests in the lab. In addition, it is unclear if dogs understand words as object names, rather than instructions.

To explore this question, at E枚tv枚s Lor谩nd University in Budapest, Hungary, and her colleagues tested 18 dogs from a wide range of breeds, including Border collies, toy poodles and Labrador retrievers.

Their owners chose five objects familiar to each dog. In the test, they said the name of an object and then showed the dog either the named object or a different object.

Each dog’s brainwaves were monitored via electroencephalography (EEG) to see whether there was a difference in activity when the dog鈥檚 owner said “ball”, but showed a stick, for example, compared with when the word and object were the same.

鈥淭he idea was that if dogs understand the meaning of the words, their brain responses will differ between the presentation of matching and mismatching objects,鈥 says Boros.

The researchers found that the EEG signals were different when the objects didn鈥檛 match and the effect was stronger for words that individual dogs knew well. This is similar to results seen in humans and suggests that dogs know that certain words represent certain objects.

鈥淭he most important realisation of this study is not only that non-humans are capable of understanding words referentially, but this capacity seems to be generally present in dogs as well,鈥 says Boros. 鈥淭his study demonstrates that dogs may understand more than they show.鈥

No breed appeared to show a greater language ability than any other, says Boros.

at the University of Adelaide, Australia, says the study adds to the knowledge of dog cognition.

鈥淚 think dogs both understand more and less than what we realise,鈥 says Hazel. 鈥淭his research shows dogs appear to make a mental representation of a word they know – for example a ball – which is not at all surprising to most dog owners who know how their dogs understand some words.鈥

On the other hand, she says, many dog owners anthropomorphise their pets and attribute emotions and comprehension abilities to them that don鈥檛 exist.

鈥淒og cognition is now one of the most studied areas around the world,鈥 says Hazel. 鈥淚 love all the research on dogs, but would love to see more on other animals we live closely with 鈥 cats, rabbits, horses.鈥

Journal reference:

Current Biology

Topics:

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