More threads by David Baxter PhD

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
De do do do, de da da da?
Music Matters
Sunday, April 19, 2009

For a long time I thought of it as quite a peculiar phenomenon: grown-ups who, the moment they spot a baby, start talking in a curious dialect. A dialect that has unclear semantics, little or no grammar, and is full of exaggerated rhythmic and melodic diversions.

Nevertheless, babies seem to love it. They react ?cooing with pleasure?to melodies that are not unlike pop songs as ?De do do do, de da da da? of The Police or ?La la la? by Kylie Minoque.

This babbling or, more formally, infant-direct speech (IDS) differs from normal adult speech by its high pitch, exaggerated melodic contours, slower tempo, and more rhythmic variation. A kind of ?musilanguage? indeed. It is a widespread phenomenon that is ?as far as we know? present in all cultures and has more similarities than differences -- even when some characteristics of IDS conflict with the rules of the adult language (e.g. Chinese). So it seems quite unlikely that IDS is ?just? a preparation for language, until recently the most common interpretation.

Laurel Trainor, and her team at McMaster University (Ontario, Canada), suggest that IDS is essentially a tool to communicate emotion. The decoding of the speech patterns into their emotional meaning is something infants can do easily, and long before they learn about language. In that sense, it seems likely that language makes use of faculties special to music instead of it being a side effect of language (as as suggested once by a well-known cognitive psychologist).

Henkjan Honing (2008). De vergeten luisteraar [The Forgotten Listener]. Boekman (77), 42-47
 
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