Date: August 29, 2016
Source: American Association for
the Advancement of Science
Dogs have the ability to
distinguish vocabulary words and the intonation of human speech through brain regions
similar to those that humans use, a new study reports.
Attila Andics et al. note that
vocabulary learning "does not appear to be a uniquely human capacity that
follows from the emergence of language, but rather a more ancient function that
can be exploited to link arbitrary sound sequences to meanings."
Words are the basic building
blocks of human languages, but they are hardly ever found in nonhuman vocal
communications. Intonation is another way that information is conveyed through
speech, where, for example, praises tend to be conveyed with higher and more
varying pitch. Humans understand speech through both vocabulary and intonation.
Here, Andics and colleagues
explored whether dogs also depend on both mechanisms. Dogs were exposed to
recordings of their trainers' voices as the trainers spoke to them using
multiple combinations of vocabulary and intonation, in both praising and
neutral ways.
For example, trainers spoke
praise words with a praising intonation, praise words with a neutral intonation,
neutral words with a praising intonation, and neutral words with neutral
intonation.
Researchers used fMRI to analyze
the dogs' brain activity as the animals listened to each combination. Their
results reveal that, regardless of intonation, dogs process vocabulary,
recognizing each word as distinct, and further, that they do so in a way
similar to humans, using the left hemisphere of the brain.
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