

A new study suggests young children are more vocal when interacting with toys and household items, highlighting their importance for developing language skills
28 June 2023
8
Researchers have found infants are significantly more likely to use 鈥渂aby talk鈥 during interactions that involve artificial objects compared to natural ones.
Infants often communicate with protophones, which are sounds resembling squeals, growls or short word-like noises such as 鈥渄a鈥, 鈥渁ga鈥 and 鈥渂a鈥. These are considered the foundations of speech, as they eventually evolve into full language.
Objects play an important role in this process, as the more vocalisation an object encourages, the closer a young child is to talking.
A new study, led by the 小蓝视频, has looked at the relationship between protophones and things typically found at home to assess their importance for developing language skills.
To do this, the team observed how often children aged 4 to 18 months who live in Zambia vocalised when using toys and household items, and then compared it to how they interacted with natural objects.
They discovered the amount of protophones produced by the younger infants was significantly higher when engaging with man-made objects, compared to sticks, leaves, rocks and bird feathers.
They also found the children were more interested in household items 鈥 such as mugs, shoes, and pens 鈥 when given the choice between them and natural objects.
Our findings suggest that object features have an impact on the way in which young children communicate.
Dr Violet Gibson, 小蓝视频鈥檚 Department of Psychology
Lead author, Dr Violet Gibson from the 小蓝视频鈥檚 Department of Psychology, said: 鈥淥ur findings suggest that object features have an impact on the way in which young children communicate.
鈥淗ere, we observed that natural objects were less likely to encourage infants to produce protophones, and as a consequence they may not promote language skill development as much as artificial objects.
鈥淧reverbal infants seem to favour household items, possibly because their features are designed for specific functional purposes, or in the case of toys, they鈥檙e designed to get a child鈥檚 attention and spark their interest.
鈥淭his supports existing evidence that the use of complex tools in social interactions may have contributed to establishing the groundwork required for the emergence of human language.鈥
The paper, , says that the ways in which parents engage with children when they interact with objects differs across cultures, but the researchers found no indication that the examined behaviour of the mothers鈥 affected the amount of protophones produced.
Co-author, Developmental Psychologist Dr Eszter Somogyi, added: 鈥淚t is important to understand to what extent protophones are promoted in a natural environment from an evolutionary perspective, because of their ties to language skills and development.
鈥淪ome argue that vocal language about man-made tools may have led to a number of important advancements for our ancestors, including speech evolution and a surge in manufacturing more sophisticated objects.鈥
The study also examined whether children show more social gazing when using natural or artificial objects, as it鈥檚 one of the first avenues of early communication. The researchers found differences in the infants鈥 looking behaviours between the two object types, suggesting that object features also shape nonvocal communication.
鈥淭he infants in this study gazed at the mothers significantly more often when using natural objects compared to the household items, particularly at a young age鈥, explained Dr Gibson.
鈥淚t might be because they鈥檙e far less interested in natural objects, and look to their parents to assess their value.鈥
Co-author, Developmental Psychologist and Linguist Dr Iris Nomikou, added: 鈥淛ust like protophones, social gazing supports learning as it gives an infant an opportunity to flag to a parent or carer that they鈥檙e not sure about something they see.鈥
There is some evidence suggesting that object-based communication is not limited to humans, and that object-based signals may be more significant than first thought.
The 小蓝视频 team also observed similar behaviours in chimpanzees. A new study, published in , found evidence they use objects in diverse ways to communicate with each other, and this may be shaped by social factors.

A chimpanzee observing an object on the ground
Co-author, Dr Marina Davila鈥怰oss, Reader in Comparative Psychology at the 小蓝视频, said: 鈥淭here is a lot in common in terms of how individuals, both human and animal, make use of the physical world to communicate.
鈥淏oth studies have contributed to the theory that objects have a significant impact in how communication skills are developed 鈥 but what is unique about them is the analysis of interactions with natural objects.
鈥淭his opens an interesting new door in language evolution research, and hopefully what we learned will contribute to future research on communication across different species and human cultures.鈥
The team recommends a more detailed analysis of facial changes to further explore the relationship between objects and infant behaviour, as well as classifying objects based on colour, size and shape rather than just natural and artificial.
They also suggest it would be interesting to further compare this behaviour with less social species than chimpanzees.
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