That's pretty much my question: how does a dog's memory work? Obviously dogs can remember things (ie - form long-term memories), but in what sense is that true?
From what I've read (just on the internet, so not anything substantiated by much) dogs simply form associations between their own feelings on something (pleasant/painful/etc) and a stimulus. When they see that stimulus again, they "remember" that feeling and then act accordingly. They can't "pull up" memories in the sense that we can (like remembering a past vacation or meal).
So if I left a room angry at a dog, stayed away for an hour, then came back, would the dog "remember" my anger from before, or just pick up whatever cue I was giving off at the time I walked back in? And when I leave, for the span of that hour, would the dog "think about" those events that just occurred, or would they stop thinking about it the second I left the room, because their own cue to the anger was me? And could a dog associate an inanimate object with getting in trouble/a correction? Is that how they learn not to exhibit unwanted behaviours?
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