Babies Already Have an Accent

Authored by scientificamerican.com and submitted by R0b6666

How can you tell the difference between a French baby and a German baby? No, it’s not that one is wearing a saucy little beret while the other is tucked into tiny pair of lederhosen. Well, maybe that’s part of it. But a new study in the journal Current Biology shows that the babies actually sound different. Because the melody of an infant’s cry matches its mother tongue.

We all know that babies start eavesdropping while they’re still in the womb. So when they come out, they know their mother’s voice. When they’re older, they start to imitate the sounds they hear. Eventually they babble, and then start to speak, and then you never hear the end of it. But long before that first burble or coo, babies are learning the elements of language.

A team of scientists recorded the cries of 60 newborns: 30 born into French-speaking families and 30 that heard German. And they found that French infants wail on a rising note [baby cry sound] while the Germans favor a falling melody [baby cry sound]. Those patterns match the rhythms of their native languages. So next time you hear a baby cry, listen closely. He could be telling you where he’s from.

viggy96 on September 10th, 2017 at 22:32 UTC »

Gives new meaning to subtitles. Now "Cries in Spanish", etc, will be valid.

DrFossil on September 10th, 2017 at 21:38 UTC »

There's a researcher in Germany studying this phenomenon. Apparently it can be used to diagnose eating hearing problems much earlier than otherwise possible, i.e. if your newborn doesn't cry with the local "accent" it may mean s/he couldn't hear properly in the womb.

The researcher stressed that the effect is lost when at least one of the parents isn't a native speaker or when the mother speaks other languages in her daily life, like in the case of a foreign language teacher.

This is all from memory and I'm on mobile so no references, sorry.

Sirsafari on September 10th, 2017 at 19:50 UTC »

Le wah