Dogs perceive and spontaneously normalize formant-related speaker and vowel differences in human speech sounds
Dogs perceive and spontaneously normalize formant-related speaker and vowel differences in human speech sounds
Domesticated animals have been shown to recognize basic phonemic information from human speech sounds and to recognize familiar speakers from their voices. However, whether animals can spontaneously identify words across unfamiliar speakers (speaker normalization) or spontaneously discriminate between unfamiliar speakers across words remains to be investigated. Here, we assessed these abilities in domestic dogs using the habituation–dishabituation paradigm. We found that while dogs habituated to the presentation of a series of different short words from the same unfamiliar speaker, they significantly dishabituated to the presentation of a novel word from a new speaker of the same gender. This suggests that dogs spontaneously categorized the initial speaker across different words. Conversely, dogs who habituated to the same short word produced by different speakers of the same gender significantly dishabituated to a novel word, suggesting that they had spontaneously categorized the word across different speakers. Our results indicate that the ability to spontaneously recognize both the same phonemes across different speakers, and cues to identity across speech utterances from unfamiliar speakers, is present in domestic dogs and thus not a uniquely human trait.
20190555
Root-Gutteridge, Holly
7b442bac-7986-44ce-922f-a2da1e2696cc
Ratcliffe, Victoria F.
63655f79-a449-409b-a8e6-341895d7c8c3
Korzeniowska, Anna T.
6419ff9e-543f-4e41-8d14-1f4b05e231af
Reby, David
3bf4c3ea-9eb0-4b1a-9fe8-bc7a5406387c
1 December 2019
Root-Gutteridge, Holly
7b442bac-7986-44ce-922f-a2da1e2696cc
Ratcliffe, Victoria F.
63655f79-a449-409b-a8e6-341895d7c8c3
Korzeniowska, Anna T.
6419ff9e-543f-4e41-8d14-1f4b05e231af
Reby, David
3bf4c3ea-9eb0-4b1a-9fe8-bc7a5406387c
Root-Gutteridge, Holly, Ratcliffe, Victoria F., Korzeniowska, Anna T. and Reby, David
(2019)
Dogs perceive and spontaneously normalize formant-related speaker and vowel differences in human speech sounds.
Biology Letters, 15 (12), .
(doi:10.1098/rsbl.2019.0555).
Abstract
Domesticated animals have been shown to recognize basic phonemic information from human speech sounds and to recognize familiar speakers from their voices. However, whether animals can spontaneously identify words across unfamiliar speakers (speaker normalization) or spontaneously discriminate between unfamiliar speakers across words remains to be investigated. Here, we assessed these abilities in domestic dogs using the habituation–dishabituation paradigm. We found that while dogs habituated to the presentation of a series of different short words from the same unfamiliar speaker, they significantly dishabituated to the presentation of a novel word from a new speaker of the same gender. This suggests that dogs spontaneously categorized the initial speaker across different words. Conversely, dogs who habituated to the same short word produced by different speakers of the same gender significantly dishabituated to a novel word, suggesting that they had spontaneously categorized the word across different speakers. Our results indicate that the ability to spontaneously recognize both the same phonemes across different speakers, and cues to identity across speech utterances from unfamiliar speakers, is present in domestic dogs and thus not a uniquely human trait.
Text
root-gutteridge-et-al-2019-dogs-perceive-and-spontaneously-normalize-formant-related-speaker-and-vowel-differences-in
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Published date: 1 December 2019
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Local EPrints ID: 506517
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506517
ISSN: 1744-9561
PURE UUID: b3038ba1-c52d-46e5-b7ea-d04ed3bfc853
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Date deposited: 11 Nov 2025 17:33
Last modified: 12 Nov 2025 03:04
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Author:
Holly Root-Gutteridge
Author:
Victoria F. Ratcliffe
Author:
Anna T. Korzeniowska
Author:
David Reby
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