Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Dogs can understand the meaning of nouns

- &Ј x˪΀ í˪ͽκͳ̧

Study confirms our canine companions can grasp more than simple commands – or at least for items they care about

Dogs understand what certain words stand for, according to researcher­s who monitored the brain activity of willing pooches while they were shown balls, slippers, leashes and other highlights of the domestic canine world.

The finding suggests that the dog brain can reach beyond commands such as “sit” and “fetch”, and the frenzy-inducing “walk”, to grasp the essence of nouns, or at least those that refer to items the animals care about.

“I think the capacity is there in all dogs,” said Marianna Boros, who helped arrange the experiment­s at Eötvös Loránd University in Hungary. “This changes our understand­ing of language evolution and our sense of what is uniquely human.”

Scientists have long been fascinated by whether dogs can truly learn the meanings of words and have built up some evidence to back the suspicion. A survey in 2022 found that dog owners believed their furry companions responded to between 15 and 215 words.

More direct evidence for canine cognitive prowess came in 2011 when psychologi­sts in South Carolina reported that after three years of intensive training, a border collie called Chaser had learned the names of more than 1,000 objects, including 800 cloth toys, 116 balls and 26 Frisbees.

However, studies have said little about what is happening in the canine brain when it processes words. To delve into the mystery, Boros and her colleagues invited 18 dog owners to bring their pets to the laboratory along with five objects the animals knew well. These included balls, slippers, Frisbees, rubber toys, leads and other items.

At the lab, the owners were instructed to say words for objects before showing their dog either the correct item or a different one. For example, an owner might say “Look, here’s the ball”, but hold up a Frisbee instead. The experiment­s were repeated multiple times with matching and non-matching objects.

During the tests, researcher­s monitored the dogs’ brain activity through noninvasiv­e electroenc­ephalograp­hy, or EEG. The traces revealed different patterns of activity when the objects matched or clashed with the words their owner said. The difference in the traces was more pronounced for words that owners believed their dogs knew best.

Similar blips in EEG recordings were seen when humans performed the tests and were interprete­d as people understand­ing a word well enough to form a mental representa­tion that was either confirmed or confounded by the object they were subsequent­ly shown.

Writing in Current Biology, the scientists say the results “provide the first neural evidence for object word knowledge in a non-human animal”. It will take further work to understand whether dogs can generalise in the way humans learn to as infants, and grasp that the word “ball” need not refer to one specific sphere.

The study raises the question of why, if dogs understand certain nouns, more of them don’t show it. One possibilit­y is that a dog knows what a word refers to but is not bothered about acting on it. “My dog only cares about his ball,” said Boros.

Dr Holly Root-Gutteridge, a postdoctor­al researcher at the University of Lincoln who was not involved in the study, called the work “fascinatin­g”. “I think it’s unlikely this started during domesticat­ion, so it may be widespread throughout mammals,” she said. “That’s highly exciting in itself as it shines new light on language evolution.

 ?? ?? Lab studies suggest the dog brain can reach beyond commands such as ‘fetch’ and ‘sit’. (Zoonar GmbH/Alamy)
Lab studies suggest the dog brain can reach beyond commands such as ‘fetch’ and ‘sit’. (Zoonar GmbH/Alamy)

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