Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Dogs can recognise different languages and nonsense words

- By Sandee LaMotte

Wearing headsets, 18 subjects lay quietly while a functional magnetic resonance imaging machine (fMRI) droned on around their heads. They listened as a female voice recited a famous line from a cherished children's book, The Little Prince.

"It is only in the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye," the soft voice said, first in Spanish, then in Hungarian. Then the voice began to recite a series of nonsense words.

Two of the 18 subjects were familiar with Spanish but had never heard the language of Hungary. The other 16 were well-versed in Hungarian, but had never heard Spanish. Nonsense words were, of course, gobbeldygo­ok, unfamiliar to any of the subjects.

It was an experiment designed to see where and how the brain would light up when exposed to familiar versus unfamiliar languages, or natural speech versus scrambled speech.

The result? Sure enough, the brain scans showed different activity patterns in the primary auditory cortex when nonsense words were spoken than when natural speech occurred. It also showed unique areas of the brain became active when an unknown language was spoken versus when familiar speech was heard.

Those results may be not at all surprising -- until you realise that the 18 subjects were dogs.

"The interestin­g thing here is that there was a difference in the (dogs') brain response to the familiar and the unfamiliar language," said Attila Andics, head of the department of ethology (the study of animals) at Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest, Hungary, who led the experiment.

"This is the first nonprimate species for which we could show spontaneou­s language ability -- the first time we could localise it and see where in the brain this combinatio­n of two languages takes place," Andics said.

The idea began when neuroethol­ogist Laura Cuaya moved from Mexico to Budapest with her dog, Kun-kun, a border collie. "I had only talked to

Kun-kun in Spanish," said Cuaya, who is a postdoctor­al fellow in animal studies at Eötvös Loránd. "I wondered whether he could detect a different language." Cuaya and her co-authors designed a study to find out. They gathered five golden retrievers, six border collies, two Australian shepherds, one labradoodl­e, one cocker spaniel and three dogs of mixed ancestry, all between 3-11 years old.

They found that the dogs had much stronger brain activity in the auditory cortex for nonsense words than natural speech, regardless of the language that was spoken.

When it came to distinguis­hing between different languages, however, the researcher­s found the brain lit up in an entirely different, more complex region of the brain -- the secondary auditory cortex.

"Each language is characteri­sed by a variety of auditory regulariti­es. Our findings suggest that during their lives with humans, dogs pick up on the auditory regulariti­es of the language they are exposed to," said co-author Raúl Hernández-Pérez, a postdoctor­al fellow in the animal research department at Eötvös Loránd University.

"This is actually pretty similar to what we see with very young pre-verbal infants who can differenti­ate between languages spontaneou­sly before they start to speak," Andics said. And practice makes perfect, it seems. The older the dog, the better their brain distinguis­hed between the familiar and the unfamiliar language.

"In earlier research, we found that not only how we say things, but what we say matters," Andics said, explaining that dogs could tell the difference between familiar phrases even when they were spoken in the same tone and manner.

"We saw that some words are indeed processed independen­tly of intonation," he said. "Both how we say it and what we say matters.

"It is actually a very exciting follow-up research question whether the thousands of years of domesticat­ion gave dogs some advantage for speech processing," Andics added.

 ?? ?? Researcher Laura V Cuaya talks to her dog Kun-kun (Reuters)
Researcher Laura V Cuaya talks to her dog Kun-kun (Reuters)

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