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American Association for the Advancement of Science, Science, 5464(288), p. 349-351, 2000

DOI: 10.1126/science.288.5464.349

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Language Discrimination by Human Newborns and by Cotton-Top Tamarin Monkeys

Journal article published in 2000 by Marc D. Hauser, Franck Ramus ORCID, Cory Miller, Jacques Mehler, Dylan Morris
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Humans, but no other animal, make meaningful use of spoken language. What is unclear, however, is whether this capacity depends on a unique constellation of perceptual and neurobiological mechanisms or whether a subset of such mechanisms is shared with other organisms. To explore this problem, parallel experiments were conducted on human newborns and cotton-top tamarin monkeys to assess their ability to discriminate unfamiliar languages. A habituation-dishabituation procedure was used to show that human newborns and tamarins can discriminate sentences from Dutch and Japanese but not if the sentences are played backward. Moreover, the cues for discrimination are not present in backward speech. This suggests that the human newborns' tuning to certain properties of speech relies on general processes of the primate auditory system.