Science
Related: About this forumDolphins use baby talk when communicating with calves, study finds
BY ALIZA CHASAN
JUNE 26, 2023 / 6:30 PM / CBS NEWS
It appears baby talk is not just for human babies.
Bottlenose dolphins use motherese, commonly known as baby talk, when speaking to their calves, according to a study published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. A team of scientists found mother dolphins change the tone of their signature whistles, unique whistles carrying identity information, when addressing their babies.
"Our data provide an example of convergent evolution of motherese in a nonhuman mammal and support the hypothesis that motherese can facilitate vocal learning and bonding in nonhumans as well as humans," the researchers wrote.
A new study shows that humans are not the only mammals to use motherese with their offspring. Bottlenose dolphins also modify their communication with their calves.
PHOTO TAKEN UNDER NMFS MMPA PERMIT NO. 20455 ISSUED TO THE SARASOTA DOLPHIN RESEARCH PROGRAM.
The researchers analyzed recordings of 19 adult female dolphins during brief catch-and-release events near Sarasota Bay, Florida. They'd temporarily outfitted the dolphins with hydrophones attached to each dolphin's head with suction cups.
The whistles they recorded showed the sounds used to address babies have "significantly higher maximum frequencies and wider frequency ranges."
The usage of child-directed communication is believed to enhance attention, bonding and vocal learning, but researchers said they're not sure what the "mechanistic driver(s) or function(s) of" baby talk is for bottlenose dolphins.
More:
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/dolphins-baby-talk-calves-bottlenose-pitch-communicating/
Hugh_Lebowski
(33,643 posts)Has animal equivalents.
We are of this world, and we act exactly like we are.
Sky Jewels
(8,819 posts)I was just thinking about baby talk today. I know a guy who talked to his baby human daughter in very serious adult tones. It bugged the crap out of me. I guess he thought it would make her smarter or something. I was thinking, "Dude, there's a reason that baby talk is instinctive and universal amongst all cultures."