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Study finds dogs understand language

Delinquent

Well-known member
WASHINGTON (AP) -- As many a dog owner will attest, our furry friends are listening. Now, for the doubters, there is scientific proof they understand much of what they hear.

German researchers have found a border collie named Rico who understands more than 200 words and can learn new ones as quickly as many children.

Patti Strand, an American Kennel Club board member, called the report "good news for those of us who talk to our dogs."

"Like parents of toddlers, we learned long ago the importance of spelling key words like bath, pill or vet when speaking in front of our dogs," Strand said. "Thanks to the researchers who've proven that people who talk to their dogs are cutting-edge communicators, not just a bunch of eccentrics."

The researchers found that Rico knows the names of dozens of play toys and can find the one called for by his owner. That is a vocabulary size about the same as apes, dolphins and parrots trained to understand words, the researchers say.

Rico can even take the next step, figuring out what a new word means.

The researchers put several known toys in a room along with one that Rico had not seen before. From a different room, Rico's owner asked him to fetch a toy, using a name for the toy the dog had never heard.

The border collie, a breed known primarily for its herding ability, was able to go to the room with the toys and, seven times out of 10, bring back the one he had not seen before. The dog seemingly understood that because he knew the names of all the other toys, the new one must be the one with the unfamiliar name.

"Apparently he was able to link the novel word to the novel item based on exclusion learning, either because he knew that the familiar items already had names or because they were not novel," said the researchers, led by Julia Fischer of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig.

A month later, he still remembered the name of that new toy three out of six times, even without having seen it since that first test. That is a rate the scientists said was equivalent to that of a 3-year-old.

Rico's learning ability may indicate that some parts of speech comprehension developed separately from human speech, the scientists said.

"You don't have to be able to talk to understand a lot," Fischer said. The team noted that dogs have evolved with humans and have been selected for their ability to respond to the communications of people.

Katrina Kelner, Science's deputy editor for life sciences, said "such fast, one-trial learning in dogs is remarkable. This ability suggests that the brain structures that support this kind of learning are not unique to humans and may have formed the evolutionary basis of some of the advanced language abilities of humans."

Perhaps, although Paul Bloom of Yale University urges caution.

"Children can understand words used in a range of contexts. Rico's understanding is manifested in his fetching behavior," Bloom writes in a commentary, also in Science.

Bloom calls for further experiments to answer several questions: Can Rico learn a word for something other than a small object to be fetched? Can he display knowledge of a word in some way other than fetching? Can he follow an instruction not to fetch something?

Fischer and her colleagues are still working with Rico to see if he can understand requests to put toys in boxes or to bring them to certain people. Rico was born in December 1994 and lives with his owners. He was tested at home.

Funding for this research was provided in part by the German Research Foundation.
 
Our dogs don't even need words...
They understand your LOOKS and Body language like when
I'm about to bust ass on em for barking at the doorbell.
 
Being forced to live with dogs over the past few years, I have learned that they are far more intelligent that I had previously thought.
 
Reading the article, it's clear that it's learning through reasoning.

Classical conditioning means the subject learns what is taught, and in the article the dog isn't taught the name of the toy, he figures it out.

plornive said:
I am curious if it is classical conditioning or actual learning by demonstration.
 
All I have to do is say "get the bad kitty!" and my Australian Shep goes after the brown cat. He knows which cat deserves it, oh yeah... :D
 
Before my dog died, she understood baseball hand signals. She hated the double steal sign.

She also hated being called out on strikes. I'd call strike one, and she'd let out a little growl. Strike two, a little louder. After strike three, and she was punched out, she'd go beserk, pawing at the ground and throwing dirt up on me. I think she was a Ted Williams reincarnation.
 
Code said:
Reading the article, it's clear that it's learning through reasoning.

Classical conditioning means the subject learns what is taught, and in the article the dog isn't taught the name of the toy, he figures it out.
Oh yes... the article.

That is very interesting. It would be interesting to give dogs means of linguistic communication to see if they develop any sort of language amongst themselves... perhaps creating a little culture.
 
LOL, yes. We can name it Curling.

plornive said:
Oh yes... the article.

That is very interesting. It would be interesting to give dogs means of linguistic communication to see if they develop any sort of language amongst themselves... perhaps creating a little culture.
 
I have always found dogs to be very smart but COMPLETELY lacking in impulse control..

they know god damn well what they arent supposed to do by the time they are a couple of years old.. but they just cant fucking help it.. they see the prize and they are going for it.. its almost funny watching em sometimes because you can tell they know they are about to screw up..
 
Add some minor impulse control and you'd have humans without thumbs.

Milo Hobgoblin said:
I have always found dogs to be very smart but COMPLETELY lacking in impulse control..

.
 
Code said:
Add some minor impulse control and you'd have humans without thumbs.


Hasn't there been such tests on another animal...maybe rats? They implant a device that controls the actions of the rat while telling it where to go? I think that's right but I can't remember exactly
 
Milo Hobgoblin said:
I have always found dogs to be very smart but COMPLETELY lacking in impulse control..

they know god damn well what they arent supposed to do by the time they are a couple of years old.. but they just cant fucking help it.. they see the prize and they are going for it.. its almost funny watching em sometimes because you can tell they know they are about to screw up..

Exactly. My daughter's little dog knows he gonna get in trouble if he gets into the trash, but he does it anyway. The other day, I walked into the kitchen to find the trash can tumped over. He was in the living room, but when he saw me go into the kitchen, he immediately ran and hid under the bed for a couple of hours. I think he tries to get into it without knocking it over. CLever little devil.
 
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