What is it about?

In this first study on how dogs proces human speech, we found that dog brains process both what we say (with a left hemipshere dominance) and how we say it (in a right auditory brain region). And dogs not only separately analyze word meaning and intonation, but also combine them to arrive at a unified meaning. Reward regions only showed increased activity when both lexical and intonational information were consistent with praise.

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Why is it important?

Words may be a human invention, but we now see that the neural mechanisms to process them are not uniqely human. We suggest that in a suitable ontogenetic environment lexical representations can arise and be separated from acoustics, even in a non-primate mammal.

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This page is a summary of: Neural mechanisms for lexical processing in dogs, Science, August 2016, American Association for the Advancement of Science,
DOI: 10.1126/science.aaf3777.
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