Error message

You must have JavaScript and cookies enabled in your browser to flag content.

Toddlers' Responses to 'Baby Talk' Linked to Social, Cognitive, and Language Abilities

Across languages and cultures, caregivers tend to have one thing in common: they speak to babies in a happy, sing-song way that they would never use with adults. This type of speech, sometimes called “infant-directed speech,” “baby talk,” or “motherese,” is a particularly exaggerated form of emotionally expressive speech. In a recent study, researchers found that toddlers respond to this emotionally expressive speech in different ways, and these varied responses are linked with their social, linguistic, and cognitive abilities.

Topic: 

  • Family
  • Family Engagement
  • Interaction
  • Social-emotional development

Types of Diversity: 

  • Children who are Dual Language Learners

NC Community College Core Course: 

  • Infants, Toddlers, and Twos