Dogs prefer some TV shows based on their personality type, researchers found

Dogs prefer some TV shows based on their personality type, researchers found

Dogs prefer some TV shows, depending on whether their personality is nervous or excited, researchers in the US have revealed.

Oborn University Specialist 453 dogs recruitedFrom four months to 16 years of age, and their owners to enter their response in various TV shows.

“The survey examined the trends in dogs’ TV watching habits, including whether the owner tried to teach the dog to watch TV, the average number of hours per week switchs to the owner’s TV, and the average number of seconds to the dog pays attention to the TV,” researcher told Many times,

Researchers said, “The dogs who were more stimulating were more likely to display an expecting behaviors that the 3D environment has television stimulation,” the researchers said that the study was published in the study. Scientific report,

“In addition, dogs who displayed more frightened tendencies were more likely to respond to non-fashion stimuli, for example, car [or] Dorbell. ,

Experts from Obern University in Alabama recruited 453 dogs, whose age was four months to 16 years old. ,Getty images,

Last year, scientists revealed the trick of getting your pet dog Understand what you are sayingResearch published in October claimed that people should try to speak a little slow.

This concludes that the understanding of dogs of human speech depends on a slow pace. Despite not being able to produce human sounds, man’s best friend is capable of responding to human speech.

When people talk slowly, it matches the receptive abilities of animals, allowing dogs to better understand the command, the researchers say.

Write into PLOS biology The journal, the authors said: “Comparative exploration of nerve and behavioral reactions to speech suggests that understanding in dogs depends on a slow speech rhythm, which monitors tracking compared to humans, even if dogs are equally sensitive to speech materials and prosecution.”

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They hypothesize that people can accommodate their speech rate “to improve communication efficacy”.

Allice deco of the University of Geneva in Switzerland, and colleagues analyzed the outspoken sounds of 30 dogs, and the voice of 27 humans in five languages talking to others, and 22 humans were talking to dogs in those languages.

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