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Daylong Mobile Audio Recordings Reveal Multitimescale Dynamics in Infants’ Vocal Productions and Auditory Experiences

Anne S. Warlaumont, Kunmi Sobowale, Caitlin M. Fausey

2021Current Directions in Psychological Science22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The sounds of human infancy-baby babbling, adult talking, lullaby singing, and more-fluctuate over time. Infant-friendly wearable audio recorders can now capture very large quantities of these sounds throughout infants' everyday lives at home. Here, we review recent discoveries about how infants' soundscapes are organized over the course of a day based on analyses designed to detect patterns at multiple timescales. Analyses of infants' day-long audio have revealed that everyday vocalizations are clustered hierarchically in time, vocal explorations are consistent with foraging dynamics, and musical tunes are distributed such that some are much more available than others. This approach focusing on the multi-scale distributions of sounds heard and produced by infants provides new, fundamental insights on human communication development from a complex systems perspective.

Topics & Concepts

BabblingSoundscapeSingingPsychologyDynamics (music)Auditory feedbackMusicalPerspective (graphical)CommunicationCognitive psychologySound (geography)Computer scienceAcousticsLinguisticsVisual artsPhilosophyPhysicsArtificial intelligenceNeurosciencePedagogyArtInfant Health and DevelopmentAnimal Vocal Communication and BehaviorSpeech and Audio Processing