Self

Dogs Actually Understand The Words We Say, Says Study

Photo: 4 PM production / Shutterstock
dog and human

It's something every single dog owner has done at some point or another.

It's time for your dog to take a bath, or to get in the car to go to the vet. Your usually well-trained and well-behaved pup won't budge, no matter firmly you call him to you.

So what do you do? You coo at him: "Come on your big jerk, it's time to go the ve-eeh-et!"

After all, they're just dogs, so, of course, the specific words you say don't actually matter as much as the way you say them, right? You could call your dog fart face and if you did it in a voice dripping sweetness he would still look at you like you hung the moon.

RELATED: 3 Ingredients That Could Silently Be Making Your Dog Feel Sick

Well, the news is in, jerks, and it isn't good for those of you who thought (and spoke) that way.

Dogs actually understand the words we say, says a study.

According to a study published in the journal Science, our dogs understand more of what we're saying than we ever realized before.

The researchers studied a group of dogs that were trained to stay completely still while inside an fMRI machine. While inside, their brains were scanned as the scientists spoke a series of words in different intonations.

(Let us pause here to acknowledge how impossible it would be to make your dogs just chill out in an MRI. I know that I, for one, would have to stuff mine with Milkbones until he probably wouldn't even fit in the tube anymore.)

The researchers performing the study monitored the dog's brain activity and found that they process the meaning of the words in a manner similar to the way humans do.

RELATED: Couple Admits They Pay Their Rent By Snitching On Dog Owners Who Don't Pick Up Their Dog Poop

Just as human listeners can distinguish between lexical cues (the actual word being said) and intonational cues (the tone in which we say it) "to arrive at a unified representation of communicative content," our pups are also able to understand specific words we say, no matter how we say them.

While watching to see which hemisphere of the dogs' brains was activated as they heard specific words, the researchers "found a hemispheric bias for processing meaningful words, independently of intonation; an auditory brain region for distinguishing intonationally marked and unmarked words; and increased activity in primary reward regions only when both lexical and intonational information were consistent with praise."

Basically, you might think you can fool your dog by saying, "Let's go take a bath" in a sugary, sweet voice, but Fido knows exactly what the word "bath" means, thank you very much.

This works the other way around, too.

Saying words the researchers deemed as neutral — like "if" and "then" — in a chipper voice doesn't have the same pleasing effect as saying something familiar like, "Who's the best boy?"

RELATED: No, Your Dog Is Not Your "Baby" — Saying That Is An Insult To Moms

“It shows that for dogs, nice praise can very well work as a reward, but it works best if both words and intonation match,” said study co-author Attila Andics. “So dogs not only tell apart what we say and how we say it, but they can also combine the two, for a correct interpretation of what those words really meant.”

I swear that my dog can understand everything I'm saying, so to me, this is in no way surprising.

That said, I also fully believe that I know when my cat's angry with me, so my tendency to anthropomorphize animals does make me a little bit ... how do we say ... biased.

But what this means in regard to how we relate to our dogs is sort of mind-blowing.

It means not only that our dogs are smarter than many of us previously thought, but also that they are so loyal we should be ashamed of ourselves.

Now get off of your computer or smartphone, go cuddle the patient pup in your life and tell them who's the very best pupper in the whole wide world. They'll understand.

RELATED: Toddler's Parents Do Nothing As He Hits An Unleashed Pit Bull In The Head With A Water Bottle

Rebecca Jane Stokes is a writer and the former Senior Editor of Pop Culture at Newsweek with a passion for lifestyle, geek news, and true crime.