%0 Book %A Bräuer, Juliane %A Kaminski, Juliane %+ Linguistic and Cultural Evolution, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Max Planck Society %T What dogs know : %G eng %U https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000B-4000-C %@ 978-3-030-89532-7 %@ 978-3-030-89533-4 %R 10.1007/978-3-030-89533-4 %I Springer %C Cham %7 1st %D 2021 %Z Review method: peer-reviewed %P IX, 170 %X My dog understands me! At least, many dog owners think so. New scientific studies actually show that dogs understand a lot about us humans. For example, they can figure out what humans can and cannot see. Some dogs can even distinguish large numbers of toys by name, like Rico, the internationally famous Border collie.

But do dogs also understand our emotions? Can they grasp cause and effect relationships? What fascinates us humans about dogs? Is it only the proverbial ‘puppy dog eyes’ that make dogs look sympathetic? Or is it the fact that these animals have grown very well-attuned to humans and are willing to cooperate with them?

In a total of ten chapters, Juliane Bräuer and Juliane Kaminski present the results of the most important scientific studies of the last twenty years on dog cognition. %K Animal psychology, Animal behavior, Domestic dog, Animal cognition, Dog cognition, Canid cognition, Dog studies, Emotions, Comparative psychology, Behavioral biology, Canis familiaris %Z 1 Why Dogs? --- p. 1 2 How Wolves Became Dogs --- p. 11 3 Dogs Are Not Wolves --- p. 27 4 What Do Dogs Understand About Others? --- p. 45 5 Do Dogs Learn by Observing Others? --- p. 61 6 How Do Dogs Interpret Human Gestures? --- p. 79 7 Communication Between Dogs and Humans --- p. 95 8 What Do Dogs Know About Their Environment? --- p. 119 9 When Dogs Help --- p. 143 10 Looking Ahead --- p. 157