Democracy Dies in Darkness

Babies are bad at listening in noisy places. Dogs aren’t. My pets took part in a study to learn why.

Perspective by
January 26, 2020 at 10:00 a.m. EST
My dogs Watson, left, and Raylan at the Canine Language Perception Lab at the University of Maryland. Because dogs typically respond better to speech-in-noise than infants, dog experiments using their names can provide important clues about what may be going on in babies. (Amritha Mallikarjun)

I’m always curious about how much my dogs understand when I talk to them. I do know one thing: They know their names. Call either “Watson” or “Raylan,” and one looks up, even in a noisy room. They know who they are.

Dog name recognition is valuable to scientists who study language perception and response in humans, especially in research on how babies process spoken words in noisy places. Studying dogs may be able to tell them. Experts already know that babies have difficulty with speech when it is noisy and that dogs respond better to it.