L Roebuck
Technical Support
Caving
^V^ Just a caver
Posts: 2,023
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Post by L Roebuck on Jul 27, 2006 13:46:39 GMT -5
Baby bats babble tooBABBLING bouts of barks by baby bats. It's not a tongue-twister; it's the first example of infant vocalisation in non-primate mammals. In human infants, babbling has an important role in language acquisition, developing the vocal tract and associated musculature. Similar behaviour is seen in other primates and some songbirds. Now a team led by Otto von Helversen at the Friedrich-Alexander University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany, has recorded infant babbling in sac-winged bat pups (Saccopteryx bilineata), a species with an unusually large vocal repertoire. The pups, aged 4 to 8 weeks, uttered renditions of all known adult vocalisations, including barks, chatters and screeches (Naturwissenschaften, DOI: 10.1007/s00114-006-0127-9). A lack of social context implies the pups babble for vocal training rather than communication. From issue 2562 of New Scientist magazine, 27 July 2006, page 18 Article: www.newscientist.com/channel/life/mg19125625.000-baby-bats-babble-too.html
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Brian Roebuck
Site Admin
Caver
Caving - the one activity that really brings you to your knees!
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Post by Brian Roebuck on Jul 28, 2006 21:00:23 GMT -5
I know some cavers that still babble. Maybe they are subconciously trying to learn to talk to bats?
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L Roebuck
Technical Support
Caving
^V^ Just a caver
Posts: 2,023
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Post by L Roebuck on Jul 29, 2006 8:15:41 GMT -5
I know some cavers that still babble. Maybe they are subconciously trying to learn to talk to bats? Yeah, and it works pretty well too!  ;D
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