The Attention-Getting Capacity of Whines and Child-Directed Speech

The current study tested the ability of whines and child-directed speech to attract the attention of listeners involved in a story repetition task. Twenty non-parents and 17 parents were presented with two dull stories, each playing to a separate ear, and asked to repeat one of the stories verbatim....

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Main Authors: Rosemarie Sokol Chang, Nicholas S. Thompson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2010-04-01
Series:Evolutionary Psychology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491000800209
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spelling doaj-1b8696ca124b451fa3d69be8deca16e22020-11-25T02:54:19ZengSAGE PublishingEvolutionary Psychology1474-70492010-04-01810.1177/14747049100080020910.1177_147470491000800209The Attention-Getting Capacity of Whines and Child-Directed SpeechRosemarie Sokol ChangNicholas S. ThompsonThe current study tested the ability of whines and child-directed speech to attract the attention of listeners involved in a story repetition task. Twenty non-parents and 17 parents were presented with two dull stories, each playing to a separate ear, and asked to repeat one of the stories verbatim. The story that participants were instructed to ignore was interrupted occasionally with the reader whining and using child-directed speech. While repeating the passage, participants were monitored for Galvanic skin response, heart rate, and blood pressure. Based on 4 measures, participants tuned in more to whining, and to a lesser extent child-directed speech, than neutral speech segments that served as a control. Participants, regardless of gender or parental status, made more mistakes when presented with the whine or child-directed speech, they recalled hearing those vocalizations, they recognized more words from the whining segment than the neutral control segment, and they exhibited higher Galvanic skin response during the presence of whines and child-directed speech than neutral speech segments. Whines and child-directed speech appear to be integral members of a suite of vocalizations designed to get the attention of attachment partners by playing to an auditory sensitivity among humans. Whines in particular may serve the function of eliciting care at a time when caregivers switch from primarily mothers to greater care from other caregivers.https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491000800209
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rosemarie Sokol Chang
Nicholas S. Thompson
spellingShingle Rosemarie Sokol Chang
Nicholas S. Thompson
The Attention-Getting Capacity of Whines and Child-Directed Speech
Evolutionary Psychology
author_facet Rosemarie Sokol Chang
Nicholas S. Thompson
author_sort Rosemarie Sokol Chang
title The Attention-Getting Capacity of Whines and Child-Directed Speech
title_short The Attention-Getting Capacity of Whines and Child-Directed Speech
title_full The Attention-Getting Capacity of Whines and Child-Directed Speech
title_fullStr The Attention-Getting Capacity of Whines and Child-Directed Speech
title_full_unstemmed The Attention-Getting Capacity of Whines and Child-Directed Speech
title_sort attention-getting capacity of whines and child-directed speech
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Evolutionary Psychology
issn 1474-7049
publishDate 2010-04-01
description The current study tested the ability of whines and child-directed speech to attract the attention of listeners involved in a story repetition task. Twenty non-parents and 17 parents were presented with two dull stories, each playing to a separate ear, and asked to repeat one of the stories verbatim. The story that participants were instructed to ignore was interrupted occasionally with the reader whining and using child-directed speech. While repeating the passage, participants were monitored for Galvanic skin response, heart rate, and blood pressure. Based on 4 measures, participants tuned in more to whining, and to a lesser extent child-directed speech, than neutral speech segments that served as a control. Participants, regardless of gender or parental status, made more mistakes when presented with the whine or child-directed speech, they recalled hearing those vocalizations, they recognized more words from the whining segment than the neutral control segment, and they exhibited higher Galvanic skin response during the presence of whines and child-directed speech than neutral speech segments. Whines and child-directed speech appear to be integral members of a suite of vocalizations designed to get the attention of attachment partners by playing to an auditory sensitivity among humans. Whines in particular may serve the function of eliciting care at a time when caregivers switch from primarily mothers to greater care from other caregivers.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/147470491000800209
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