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Why We Talk to Babies Differently

Why We Talk to Babies Differently

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This episode explains that the special way adults speak to babies—often called infant-directed speech or parentese—is a natural and important tool for language development. When talking to infants, adults automatically raise the pitch of their voice, slow their speech, exaggerate vowels, and repeat words. These changes make speech patterns easier for babies’ developing brains to detect and understand.

The higher pitch captures infants’ attention, while the slower rhythm and clearer pronunciation help them recognize where words begin and end. Brain studies show that babies respond more strongly to this style of speech than to normal adult conversation, which supports early learning of language sounds and patterns.

Infant-directed speech also strengthens emotional bonding. The warm tone communicates safety and engagement, encouraging babies to pay attention and eventually imitate sounds themselves. Over time, as children grow and learn language structure, adults gradually return to normal speech.

Overall, this instinctive communication style acts as an early teaching system, helping babies transform unfamiliar sounds into meaningful language while building strong social and emotional connections.

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