Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Infants Can Judge Friends, Strangers By Laughter

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Mar, 2019 08:49 PM

    Infants as young as five months can differentiate laughter between friends and between strangers, finds a new study.

     

    It has been recently established that co-laughter -- or simultaneous laughter between two or more individuals -- allows adult listeners across different cultures and languages to quickly evaluate the nature of relationships between people: are they friends, acquaintances, or strangers?


    The study suggests that the ability to detect this nature of social relationships is instilled early in human infancy, possibly the result of a detection system that uses vocal cues.


    "Infants' sensitivity to different kinds of laughter might be one of the early emerging tools they use to understand and navigate the complex social world," said Athena Vouloumanos, Associate Professor from the New York University.


    "Very brief instances of shared laughter can reveal rich information about people's relationships, detectable in infants as young as five months of age and universally by adults around the world," added co-author Gregory Bryant, Professor at University of California-Los Angeles.


    For the study, published in the Scientific Reports journal, the team examined how five-month-olds processed exchanges of co-laughter of adults -- specifically, those who were strangers and those who were friends -- by gauging how long they listened to these sounds.


    The team found that infants could not only differentiate between the laughter of friends and strangers, but, when given the choice, they preferred to listen longer to co-laughter between friends.


    In another experiment, the team found that infants could tie co-laughter to judgments about human relationships.


    "The ability to rapidly evaluate acoustic features in co-laughter that reveal social relationships between individuals appears early in human infancy and might be the product of an adaptive affiliation detection system that uses vocal cues," the authors said.

     

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Canada's First HIV-Positive Restaurant Opens In Toronto To Counter Stigmas

    Canada's First HIV-Positive Restaurant Opens In Toronto To Counter Stigmas
    Today, living and working in Toronto, Mikiki says similar conversations happen frequently about HIV.

    Canada's First HIV-Positive Restaurant Opens In Toronto To Counter Stigmas

    FlyOver Canada Inspired Flight Ride Opening in Iceland

    FlyOver Canada Inspired Flight Ride Opening in Iceland
    FlyOver Iceland will provide guests with an exhilarating virtual flight experience over the awe-inspiring country of Iceland.

    FlyOver Canada Inspired Flight Ride Opening in Iceland

    Is It Normal For 8-Year-Olds Having Protein Shakes, 10-Year-Olds Lifting Weights

    Is It Normal For 8-Year-Olds Having Protein Shakes, 10-Year-Olds Lifting Weights
    What age, you think, is best for children to start exercising? Like lifting weights and consuming protein shakes? Before you aver that even David Beckham’s 12-year-old son Cruz goes to the gym, we say it’s not about exceptional kids. 

    Is It Normal For 8-Year-Olds Having Protein Shakes, 10-Year-Olds Lifting Weights

    Ditch The Quinoa And Kale. To Boost Health, Eat Like Your Ancestors Did

    Ditch The Quinoa And Kale. To Boost Health, Eat Like Your Ancestors Did
    Malnutrition problems can be traced to poor-quality diets lacking in diversity, a recent phenomenon in evolutionary history. To eat healthy, turn to desi food.

    Ditch The Quinoa And Kale. To Boost Health, Eat Like Your Ancestors Did

    Why Eating Whole Grains May Be More Healthy

    Why Eating Whole Grains May Be More Healthy
    Regularly consuming whole grain foods such as barley, brown rice, millet, oatmeal and rye may help lose weight as well as decrease the risk of heart disease and diabetes, a study has claimed.

    Why Eating Whole Grains May Be More Healthy

    Humans Began Eating Grapes 22,000 Years Ago: Study

    Humans Began Eating Grapes 22,000 Years Ago: Study
    Humans started consuming grapes nearly 22,000 years ago when the ice sheets covering much of North America and Europe began retreating, finds a genomic study.

    Humans Began Eating Grapes 22,000 Years Ago: Study