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  • 16 hours ago

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Animals
Transcript
00:00How Dog Brains Are Wired to Understand and Connect with Humans
00:04A Border Collie stares at a puzzle toy on a kitchen floor.
00:09Modern science shows dog brains reading faces, voices, smells, words, routines, and human gestures.
00:16A dog watches a smiling owner, and brain scans show canines respond differently to human faces.
00:22A golden retriever hears a familiar voice, then turns its head, because dog brains process tone and meaning.
00:30A beagle sniffs a cotton pad in a lab, using powerful nose pathways that dominate canine brain space.
00:37A border collie learns toy names, then picks a ball or rope after hearing the spoken word.
00:43A puppy follows a pointed finger toward a hidden treat, showing social skills that young wolves rarely match.
00:49A dog dreams with twitching paws during sleep, while brain patterns suggest running, playing, or chasing memories.
00:57A rescue dog freezes at thunder because fear circuits can connect loud sounds with stressful past experiences.
01:05An older dog paces at night, and canine cognitive decline can affect memory, sleep, and house training.
01:12A therapy dog rests beside a hospital bed, reacting to human stress through scent, posture, and voice.
01:20Training rewards light up dog learning, because treats, praise, and play help the brain repeat successful actions.
01:27Faces, voices, smells, gestures, dreams, and rewards make the dog brain intensely tuned to people.
01:36A dog taps the puzzle toy, hears a click, and finds the hidden treat.
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