I am sure it would. Check on YouTube. I have seen both cat and dog videos using buttons.Astounding. I wonder if this could help vets… “tummy” “ache” “UTI” Etc. I‘m gobsmacked. Does it work w dogs?
Dogs were the first to use them Stella was the first. Her human works with humans who use AAC buttons to communicate and she tried them with Stella. https://instagram.com/hunger4words?igshid=NDk5N2NlZjQ=Astounding. I wonder if this could help vets… “tummy” “ache” “UTI” Etc. I‘m gobsmacked. Does it work w dogs?
Thanks for sending the link! I did not know what this was about. Stella understands more than me! Ha!!!Dogs were the first to use them Stella was the first. Her human works with humans who use AAC buttons to communicate and she tried them with Stella. https://instagram.com/hunger4words?igshid=NDk5N2NlZjQ=
Another famous one is Bunny the Talking Dog. Bunny is part of a long observational experiment on AAC speech in dogs. https://instagram.com/whataboutbunny?igshid=NDk5N2NlZjQ=
Many people give their cats and dogs 'ouch' buttons. Billie (above) has an ouch button and can communicate when the symptoms of her illness causes pain.
I don't think a pet will be able to diagnose such as UTI. But being able to express stress could limit UTIs anyway
All of the above?Have not been able to stop thinking about why the cat keeps pressing the “mad” button. Linguistic frustration? Not enough tuna?