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Sascha Crasnow believes that Parker, her two-year-old Beagle mix, can “speak” to her by using her paw to tap
buttons with prerecorded words on them.
The dog recently coined a new term for ambulance, after spotting one parked outside, by pressing the buttons
“squeaker” and then “car,” she says. During a visit from Crasnow’s father, the dog asked his name by using three
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buttons: “what,” “word” and “human.”
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They are known as “button dogs” for their perceived ability to communicate by pressing buttons identifiable by
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pictures, symbols or location corresponding to specific words. Pet parents record nouns, verbs and emotions, and
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owners can purchase buttons and soundboards from about $30 for a
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kit to of partners
for a “They can talk” complete set. Button dog videos have become their own genre on social
media. One of the hashtags used with videos of button dogs, #dogbuttons, had more than 102.8 million views on
TikTok, as of Monday afternoon.
Button dogs are also the subject of debate, with animal behavior experts raising questions about what the dogs are
really “saying” and whether the words mean the same thing to a dog as they do to us.
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“We already understand what dogs are trying to tell us without the buttons, but when we use a human linguistic
interface, we start ascribing too much to our joint understanding of these words,” said Amritha Mallikarjun, a
postdoctoral fellow at the Penn Vet Working Dog Center at the University of Pennsylvania. “If a dog hits the button
‘love,’ maybe what it means to the dog is: ‘when I hit this button, I get pets, or everyone says my name.’ ”
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Sarah-Elizabeth Byosiere, director of the Thinking Dog Center at Hunter College, dogs have been
‘talking’ to us this whole time, but we just haven’t been ‘listening,’” she said. “The short videos I see online seem to
indicate that dogs are able to form associations between a button press and an outcome, but it’s really difficult to
say if anything more is happening.”
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The research, created by Federico Rossano, the principal investigator, is being conducted in partnership with
FluentPet, which produces and sells buttons and soundboards. The company is sharing data with Rossano’s lab and
the University of California at San Diego, but is not funding the study, he said.
“We are not paying for the data, and they are not paying us to analyze the data,” Rossano said. “My lab collects
additional data and runs behavioral experiments as well, completely independent of FluentPet.”
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Clive Wynne, founding director of the Canine Science Collaboratory at Arizona State University, is not surprised
that many button dog parents are already convinced.
“We love our dogs, and so we are prone to putting the richest possible interpretation on the things they do,” Wynne
said. He believes only a small minority of dogs can use the buttons to communicate, which he regards as
a “receptive” vocabulary — most words were the names of toys — and would bring them back on command, Wynne
said.
Wynne recently met with Rossano to learn more about the research and said he was “reassured” it will provide
answers to many unresolved questions. “The fact that he is not rushing is a good thing,” Wynne said. “Also, he’s not
taking their [FluentPet’s] money. He takes data, but he’s not taking their money.”
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“Dogs using words to communicate is a paradigm-shifting concept,” said Christina Hunger, a speech-language
pathologist who taught her dog Stella to “speak” based on practices used in teaching language to babies and
toddlers.
Hunger describes several episodes that she says show Stella combining words to form expressive sentences. When
Hunger delayed taking Stella outside, for instance, she says the dog pressed the buttons, “mad” “look” “want” “play”
“outside.”
Similarly, Joelle Andres, a special education administrator who divides her time between Levittown and Sleepy
Hollow Lake, N.Y., said her terrier Bastian picked up the technique almost immediately, learning to press buttons
that said “treat,” “outside” and “walk.”
“He would hit the ‘outside’ button and run to the door,” Andres said. “If he hit the ‘treat’ button, he would go to the
kitchen where the treats are. With ‘walk,’ he would go downstairs where we keep the leash.”
Experts still aren’t convinced
Alexandra Horowitz, who directs the Dog Cognition Lab at Barnard College, pointed out that dogs already “tell” us
what they want, signaling when they want to go outside and tossing a ball when they want to play.
She thinks dogs can learn to use the buttons, but that doesn’t necessarily advance their current ways of
communicating. The risk she said, is that focus on button communication “may distract us from the elaborate
communications they already make.”
“My fascination would be if the medium enabled dogs to say something truly unsayable without the buttons,”
Horowitz said. “But it’s not clear that dogs are trying to say things which they cannot.”
Clara Wilson, a postdoctoral researcher in the Working Dog Center at the University of Pennsylvania, agreed. “Dogs
can accurately use symbols and buttons paired with objects and actions,” she said. “However, this is very different
from an ability to use language in the same way that humans do.”
Since dogs primarily use body language to communicate — especially with other dogs — humans should learn to
read dog body language, rather than ask them to learn ours, she said.
While experts say there still is much to learn, engaging with the buttons can be enriching for both humans and their
pets — and fun.
“Regardless of what the science tells us, if it allows owners to interact and better understand their own dogs, I think
this is great,” said Hunter College’s Byosiere. “So, button-push away.”