“…Through the process of domestication and extensive experience with humans, dogs have learned to interpret and rely on human communicative cues, including eye contact (e.g., Kaminski, Schulz, & Tomasello, 2012;Téglás, Gergely, Kupán, Miklósi, & Topál, 2012), high-pitched infant-directed speech (e.g., Ben-Aderet, Gallego-Abenza, Reby, & Mathevon, 2017;Rossano, Nitzschner, & Tomasello, 2014;Scheider, Grassmann, Kaminski, & Tomasello, 2011), and pointing (e.g., Hare, Brown, Williamson, & Tomasello, 2002;Lakatos, Soproni, Dóka, & Miklósi, 2009;Riedel, Schumann, Kaminski, Call, & Tomasello, 2008). Although it is difficult to fully disentangle the root causes of dogs' sensitivity to human communicative cues, it is clear that at least some of this sensitivity to human communicative cues arises from dogs' evolutionary history.…”