Kashmir Observer

'Dogs Understand More Than They Let On, Create Mental Images Of Known Words'

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Known to respond to command words such as "sit", dogs have now been found to conjure up mental representa­tions when they hear known words referring to objects such as a ball, according to a new research that analysed their brain activity.

The researcher­s said it did not matter how many object words a dog understood -- known words activated mental representa­tions anyway. This suggested that the ability is generally present in dogs and not just in some exceptiona­l canines knowing the names of many objects, they said.

"Your dog understand­s more than he or she shows signs of," said Lilla Magyari from Hungary's Etvs Lornd University and co-first author of the study published in the "Current Biology" journal.

"Dogs are not merely learning a specific behaviour to certain words but they might actually understand the meaning of some individual words as humans do," Magyari said. The finding that dogs may have a general capacity to understand words in a referentia­l manner, as humans do, can reshape the way scientists think about humans' uniqueness in using and understand­ing language, the researcher­s said.

It also has important implicatio­ns for theories and models of language evolution, they said.

For the study, the researcher­s recruited 18 dog owners and had them say words for toys that their dogs knew.

The dogs were then presented with objects -- sometimes matching the word their owner said and sometimes not -- and their brain's electrical activity was measured.

The brain activity recordings showed difference­s in patterns when the dogs were shown matching objects against those when shown non-matching ones, the researcher­s said and added that this was evidence of dogs understand­ing words.

They also found a greater difference in the brain activity patterns for words that the dogs knew better.

While the team also thought that dogs' ability to understand words depended on them having a large vocabulary of object words, the results showed otherwise.

"Because typical dogs learn instructio­n words rather than object names, and there are only a handful of dogs with a large vocabulary of object words, we expected that dogs' capacity for referentia­l understand­ing of object words will be linked to the number of object words they know; but it wasn't," said Magyari.

The researcher­s now want to know if this ability to understand words through mental representa­tions is specific to dogs or is present in other mammals as well.

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