Episode 367: How a dog understands its name

Episode 367: How a dog understands its name

From The Canine Paradigm by Glenn Cooke & Pat Stuart

June 13, 2026 · 1h 18m

About this episode

This episode explores how dogs understand their names and the implications for training and communication.

In Episode 367 of The Canine Paradigm, we explore how a dog understands its name and whether that understanding is anything like the way humans think about names. For people, a name often carries identity, history, emotion, ownership, and social meaning. However, for dogs, the concept may work very differently. We walk through the difference between human interpretation and canine learning. Does the dog understand its name as “me”, or has the sound simply become a cue that predicts attention, movement, reward, pressure, or interaction? We also discuss how owners often use a dog’s name in confusing ways, sometimes as a recall, sometimes as a warning, sometimes as background noise, and sometimes as a correction. From there, we look at how to build a cleaner name response. If the name means orient to the handler, then we need to teach that clearly. If it means prepare for information, then the dog needs a consistent history attached to it. Either way, the lesson is the same. The dog’s name is not magic. It is a trained signal, shaped by repetition, emotion, timing, and consequence. This episode will make you think differently about one of the most common words your dog hears every…

People in this episode

Hosts: Glenn Cooke, Pat Stuart

Topics covered

  • dog training
  • canine behavior
  • understanding names
  • human-animal communication
  • name response

Keywords

  • dog name
  • canine learning
  • owner communication
  • training signals
  • behavior cues

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