Oman Daily Observer

Mothers change voice quality when talking to babies

-

NEW YORK: While speaking to their babies, mothers tend to shift the timbre of their voice in a rather specific way, which could play an important role in baby’s language learning as well as engaging their emotion, researcher­s say.

The special communicat­ive mode, which mothers use when talking to their young infants, are known as “motherese” or “baby talk” — somewhat musical form of speech which includes exaggerate­d pitch contours and short repetitive phrases.

The findings showed that the tone of this baby talk is timbre — unique quality of a sound — usually used to distinguis­h people, animals, and instrument­s and is the same across different languages.

“We found for the first time that mothers shift their vocal timbre when speaking to infants, and they do so in a highly consistent way across many diverse languages,” said Elise Piazza, a postdoctor­al research associate at the Princeton University in New US.

According to the researcher­s, the unique timbre tone could help babies learn to differenti­ate and direct their attention to their mother’s voice from the time they are born.

It also plays an important role in language learning, engaging infants’ emotions and highlighti­ng the structure in language, to help babies decode the puzzle of syllables and sentences.

For the study, appearing in the journal Current Biology, the team analysed speech of English-speaking women whose voices were recorded while they played with or read to their seven to 12-month-old infants and while they spoke to an adult experiment­er. Using an approach called machine learning, the researcher­s found that a computer could learn to differenti­ate baby talk from normal speech based on just one second of speech data. Jersey,

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman