-
Recalled Ndiaye takes Senegal past 10-man Mali into AFCON semis
-
'Devastated' Switzerland grieves New Year inferno victims
-
Man pleads guilty to sending 'abhorrent messages' to England women's footballer Carter
-
PGA Tour unveils fall slate with Japan, Mexico, Bermuda stops
-
'Unhappy' Putin sends message to West with Ukraine strike on EU border
-
Fletcher defends United academy after Amorim criticism
-
Stocks shrug off mixed US jobs data to advance
-
Kyiv mayor calls for temporary evacuation over heating outages
-
Families wait in anguish for prisoners' release in Venezuela
-
Littler signs reported record £20 million darts deal
-
'Devastated' Switzerland grieves deadly New Year fire
-
Syria threatens to bomb Kurdish district in Aleppo as fighters refuse to evacuate
-
Britain's Princess Catherine 'deeply grateful' after year in cancer remission
-
Russia joins Chinese, Iran warships for drills off South Africa
-
40 white roses: shaken mourners remember Swiss fire victims
-
German trial starts of 'White Tiger' online predator
-
Stocks rise despite mixed US jobs data
-
'Palestine 36' director says film is about 'refusal to disappear'
-
US December hiring misses expectations, capping weak 2025
-
Switzerland 'devastated' by fire tragedy: president
-
Semenyo says he wants to 'rewrite history again' after joining Man City
-
Rosenior not scared of challenge at 'world class' Chelsea
-
Polish farmers march against Mercosur trade deal
-
Swiatek wins in 58 minutes as Poland reach United Cup semis
-
Grok limits AI image editing to paid users after nudes backlash
-
Ski great Hirscher pulls out of Olympics, ends season
-
Kyiv mayor calls for temporary evacuation after Russian strikes
-
'War is back in vogue,' Pope Leo says
-
Storms pummel northern Europe causing travel mayhem and power cuts
-
France has right to say 'no' to US, Paris says
-
TikTok drives 'bizarre' rush to Prague library's book tower
-
EU countries override France to greenlight Mercosur trade deal
-
Russia joins Chinese, Iran warships for drills off S.Africa
-
Stocks rise ahead of US jobs data and key tariffs ruling
-
'All are in the streets': Iranians defiant as protests grow
-
Kurdish fighters refuse to leave Syria's Aleppo after truce
-
Grok turns off AI image generation for non-payers after nudes backlash
-
Germany factory output jumps but exports disappoint
-
Defiant Khamenei insists 'won't back down' in face of Iran protests
-
Russian strikes cut heat to Kyiv, mayor calls for temporary evacuation
-
Switzerland holds day of mourning after deadly New Year fire
-
Trump says US oil pledged $100 bn for Venezuela ahead of White House meeting
-
Hundreds of thousands without power as storms pummel Europe
-
Man City win race to sign forward Semenyo
-
Experts say oceans soaked up record heat levels in 2025
-
'Would be fun': Alcaraz, Sinner tease prospect of teaming up in doubles
-
Man City win race to sign Semenyo
-
Chinese AI unicorn MiniMax soars 109 percent in Hong Kong debut
-
Iran rocked by night of protests despite internet blackout: videos
-
Stocks mixed ahead of US jobs, Supreme Court ruling
Rare genius dogs learn vocabulary by eavesdropping: study
There's a few special words that will perk the ears of many a dog -- hungry, park, and of course T-R-E-A-T.
But a choice group of gifted canines appear to have remarkable capacity for learning human vocabulary, to the point that they acquire language by eavesdropping the way young toddlers do.
That's according to a new study published Thursday in the journal Science, which shows that some "gifted word learner" dogs already known capable of learning toy names through training and play can also pick up words simply by overhearing people speak to each other.
Cognitive researcher Shany Dror of the Veterinary University of Vienna's Clever Dog Lab has spent years running a "Genius Dog Challenge" that recruits canines who've demonstrated particular ability to learn language through social interactions.
In her research she noticed that some dogs seemed to be listening in on their owners: "They would tell me stories, like we were talking about ordering a pizza, and then the dog came into the living room with the toy named pizza," Dror told AFP.
So she and a team out of Hungary's Eotvos Lorand University set out to test whether their group of particularly intelligent dogs could create the association of a new word to a new object without being directly taught the connection.
And in a new development they found the gifted dogs could learn new toy names just as well from overheard speech as they did when directly addressed, proving it by later retrieving the toys.
These dogs are considered outliers: Dror said her team has been searching for some seven years for dogs who know toy names, and have found about 45.
Yet she said the findings offer some clues about the "complex machinery needed for social learning, to see if it exists in an animal that does not have language."
"We found that it does exist," Dror said. "This gives us a kind of hint to the fact that before humans developed language, they first had this very complex cognitive ability to learn from others."
- Canine savants? -
Clive Wynne, a canine behaviorist at Arizona State University, called the study "very nicely done," but cautioned that the animals studied were "deeply exceptional" and that people shouldn't expect genius qualities from their family pets.
But how do these intelligent pups become so smart?
"One obvious possibility is that these dogs are true canine savants," said Wynne.
"But another possibility is that it's not their cognition that's exceptional, it's their motivational system -- that they have motivational systems that can be activated and yet never fill up."
Wynne gave the example of the dog Chaser, who had a phenomenal vocabulary of more than a 1,000 words -- and who also had a phenomenal capacity for training and play that isn't representative of the species.
Chaser was a Border Collie, a working dog breed Dror said is among the top dog types among gifted word learners.
But she said they have seen a "surprising" range of breeds represented including a Shih Tzu, a Pekingese, Yorkshires along with mixed breeds including a rescue.
Even though "typical" dogs aren't likely to learn from overheard speech, Dror emphasized that dogs in general still "are really good at understanding human communicative cues."
"Even if our dogs do not know the names of objects, I think we can still pay more attention to how we are conducting ourselves when we're interacting with our dogs," Drof said, "with the underlying thought that maybe our dogs are learning something from this."
P.Smith--AT