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Hellooooo baaay-beee

BABY talk sounds silly, but it makes sense to babies. The reason? It’s easier
to understand than normal English—at least to the ears of a new
speech-recognition software system.

Patricia Kuhl and her team at the University of Washington in
Seattle—who invented the system—had already studied the carefully
articulated vowel sounds adults use to talk to babies and toddlers. They found
that these baby-talk vowels are not just spoken more clearly but are
phonetically different to their adult equivalents. People seem to speak in this
way whatever their language, so the researchers wondered if baby talk helps
children to learn to speak.

But they could not test the idea directly. “You can’t do the experiment
because you would need to take one group of children and prevent them being
exposed to infant-directed speech,” says Bart de Boer, a researcher in Kuhl’s
group.

So de Boer has simulated the experiment by writing a simple computer program
that picks out key vowels in English. He chose “o”, “oo” and “ee” because the
sounds are very distinctive.

De Boer played the computer recordings of 10 mothers saying the words “sock”,
“shoe” and “sheep” in two different ways. In one set, the mothers were talking
to another adult, while in the other they were talking to their babies.

The computer’s task was to distinguish between the three vowel sounds. After
analysing about 200 infant-directed words, the computer could easily tell the
sounds apart. But when it listened to the same number of recordings of the words
as spoken to adults, it recognised only “ee” correctly.

De Boer does not claim that his program learns in the same way as a child.
But he says that, like the computer, babies probably understand baby talk better
than grown-up speech because of its more distinct vowels.

He hopes his program could also help computer language systems recognise
different dialects. But Deb Roy, of MIT’s Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
is not so sure. “This is really telling you more about what adults are doing in
talking to their infants than telling you how to build a computer system,” he
says.

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