Cows visually discriminate and cross-modally recognise familiar and unfamiliar human faces in videos
This study examined whether domesticated cows can discriminate between familiar and unfamiliar human faces shown in silent videos and whether they can recognize these faces across modalities when accompanied by matching or mismatching human voices. Thirty-two cows completed a visual preference test (videos with familiar vs unfamiliar faces) and a cross-modal test (congruent vs incongruent voice relative to the face). Cows looked significantly longer at videos showing unfamiliar people in the visual test and at videos congruent with the voice in the cross-modal test, indicating discrimination and cross-modal representation. The paper’s limitation is that it tested gaze preference rather than directly measuring recognition accuracy or behavioral outcomes beyond looking time. The paper does not explicitly discuss endometriosis or adenomyosis; it was included in the corpus via a keyword match in the upstream search index.
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- last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00