New Study: Dogs Don't Understand Humans as Well as it Was Thought

Dogs wait for an examination at an MR scanner at Eotvos Lorand University in Budapest, Hungary, Feb/ 11, 2016. (AFP Photo)
Dogs wait for an examination at an MR scanner at Eotvos Lorand University in Budapest, Hungary, Feb/ 11, 2016. (AFP Photo)
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New Study: Dogs Don't Understand Humans as Well as it Was Thought

Dogs wait for an examination at an MR scanner at Eotvos Lorand University in Budapest, Hungary, Feb/ 11, 2016. (AFP Photo)
Dogs wait for an examination at an MR scanner at Eotvos Lorand University in Budapest, Hungary, Feb/ 11, 2016. (AFP Photo)

Despite dogs' excellent hearing and ability to analyze and process different speech sounds, a new study led by researchers at Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest indicates that dogs fail to distinguish subtle variances between similar-sounding words.

The number of words dogs can learn to recognize remains very low even when they live with humans and are exposed to human speech. Researchers suggest that although dogs have human-like hearing abilities, they might be less capable of coping with nuances between words.

In the study published on December 9 in the journal Royal Society Open Science, the researchers tested this idea. They developed a procedure for measuring electrical activity in the brain of untrained family dogs. The researchers invited dogs and their owners to the lab. After the dog became familiar with the room and the experimenters, the experimenters asked the owner to sit down on a mattress together with her dog to relax. Then, they put electrodes on the dog's head and fixed it with a tape. The dogs then listened to tape-recorded instruction words they knew (e.g., "sit"), to similar but nonsense words (e.g., "sut"), and to very different nonsense words (e.g., "bep").

The analysis of the recorded electric brain activity showed that dog brains clearly and quickly discriminated the known words from the very different nonsense words starting from 200 ms after the beginning of the words. This effect is in line with similar studies on humans showing that the human brain responds differently to meaningful and nonsense words already within a few hundred milliseconds.

But the dogs' brains made no differentiation between known words and those nonsense words that differed in a single speech sound only. This pattern is more similar to the results of experiments with human infants. Infants become efficient in processing phonetic details of words, which is an important prerequisite for developing a large vocabulary.

"But it seems that dogs do not overcome this phase, as they might not attend to all speech sounds forming words. This might also be a factor in why dogs tend to learn only a limited amount of human words, and could mean that they don't understand humans as much as humans might think. Similar-sounding words could be tripping them up, being perceived in their brains as the same thing," said Attila Andics, the study's principal investigator in a report published on the university website.



EU Scientists: May Was World's Second-hottest on Record

FILE PHOTO: A man sits on a tangle of branches in the Sacramento River while staying cool during a heat wave in Sacramento, California, US May 30, 2025. REUTERS/Fred Greaves/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A man sits on a tangle of branches in the Sacramento River while staying cool during a heat wave in Sacramento, California, US May 30, 2025. REUTERS/Fred Greaves/File Photo
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EU Scientists: May Was World's Second-hottest on Record

FILE PHOTO: A man sits on a tangle of branches in the Sacramento River while staying cool during a heat wave in Sacramento, California, US May 30, 2025. REUTERS/Fred Greaves/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A man sits on a tangle of branches in the Sacramento River while staying cool during a heat wave in Sacramento, California, US May 30, 2025. REUTERS/Fred Greaves/File Photo

The world experienced its second-warmest May since records began this year, a month in which climate change fueled a record-breaking heatwave in Greenland, scientists said on Wednesday.

Last month was Earth's second-warmest May on record - exceeded only by May 2024 - rounding out the northern hemisphere's second-hottest March-May spring on record, the EU's Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) said in a monthly bulletin, according to Reuters.

Global surface temperatures last month averaged 1.4 degrees Celsius higher than in the 1850-1900 pre-industrial period, when humans began burning fossil fuels on an industrial scale, C3S said.

That broke a run of extraordinary heat, in which 21 of the last 22 months had an average global temperature exceeding 1.5C above pre-industrial times - although scientists warned this break was unlikely to last.

"Whilst this may offer a brief respite for the planet, we do expect the 1.5C threshold to be exceeded again in the near future due to the continued warming of the climate system," said C3S director Carlo Buontempo.

The main cause of climate change is greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels. Last year was the planet's hottest on record.

A separate study, published by the World Weather Attribution group of climate scientists on Wednesday, found that human-caused climate change made a record-breaking heatwave in Iceland and Greenland last month about 3C hotter than it otherwise would have been - contributing to a huge additional melting of Greenland's ice sheet.

"Even cold-climate countries are experiencing unprecedented temperatures," said Sarah Kew, study co-author and researcher at the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute.

The global threshold of 1.5C is the limit of warming which countries vowed under the Paris climate agreement to try to prevent, to avoid the worst consequences of warming.

The world has not yet technically breached that target - which refers to an average global temperature of 1.5C over decades.

However, some scientists have said it can no longer realistically be met, and have urged governments to cut CO2 emissions faster, to limit the overshoot and the fueling of extreme weather.

C3S's records go back to 1940, and are cross-checked with global temperature records going back to 1850.