bakara Posted February 12, 2015 Report Posted February 12, 2015 nenu last minute lo choosa aak paak ane ID anukunta kadha? yeah, aunu
Chitralekha Posted February 12, 2015 Report Posted February 12, 2015 nenu last minute lo choosa aak paak ane ID anukunta kadha? Yeah akpak ane id using I have same doubt since long... Endhuku ala side ki turn chesi chusthundhii kukkaa...
DB_Police Posted February 12, 2015 Report Posted February 12, 2015 Yeah akpak ane id using I have same doubt since long... Endhuku ala side ki turn chesi chusthundhii kukkaa... kukka ki mind dobbindi vuu
bakara Posted February 12, 2015 Report Posted February 12, 2015 Yeah akpak ane id using I have same doubt since long... Endhuku ala side ki turn chesi chusthundhii kukkaa...
Chitralekha Posted February 12, 2015 Report Posted February 12, 2015 kukka ki mind dobbindi vuu Gn Asking technical reason
Chitralekha Posted February 12, 2015 Report Posted February 12, 2015 Oy lekha Got herehttp://www.mnn.com/family/pets/stories/why-do-dogs-tilt-their-heads-when-we-speak Never mind
timmy Posted February 12, 2015 Report Posted February 12, 2015 Yeah akpak ane id using I have same doubt since long... Endhuku ala side ki turn chesi chusthundhii kukkaa... The most common explanation is that adjusting the position of the head can actually help the dog hear better, and thus analyze the situation better. A dog can hear things we can’t, but our blunt senses are much easier to use: we largely don’t have to adjust our physical positioning in order to hear, regardless of whether the sound is coming from our left or right. Dogs, though, whether because they get so much more information than we do or because their ears are more finicky, oftenhave to adjust, according to Alexandra Horowitz’s book “Inside of a Dog.” And many dogs with floppier ears--think basset hound--have a pesky (but cute) flap of skin in the way of their middle ear. The part of the dog’s brain that controls the dog’s middle ear (not the external flap that we think of as the ear) is also the part of the dog’s brain that controls nonverbal communication, according to National Geographic. Those nonverbal communication tools include facial expressions and, yes, head tilt. So perhaps the act of listening also triggers some unintentional side effects. Google
Tadika Posted February 12, 2015 Report Posted February 12, 2015 Got herehttp://www.mnn.com/family/pets/stories/why-do-dogs-tilt-their-heads-when-we-speak Never mind Evaiki quote chesav nakena
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