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  • Where's the rocket? What does a rocket do?

  • Zoom!

  • Yeah, it goes up, up, up, up and away!

  • [babbling happily]

  • [Rich] There's the button.

  • [Amelia] Get ready to press it. Fingers out.

  • [Rich] Get ready.

  • Doh!

  • Doh! Yeah. Excitement.

  • [woman] Something quite magical happens

  • at the end of a baby's first year.

  • -[Pascoe gasps] -[Rich chuckles] Oh!

  • -Wow, look at this. -Look at this, buddy.

  • Every one of them embarks on their own journey

  • toward language.

  • Can you say "space"?

  • -Dah! -That's correct.

  • [Amelia chuckles]

  • Babies start learning about language before they can walk,

  • often before they're even crawling.

  • Is it up in the sky?

  • It is.

  • -There it is. Correct. -[Amelia] It's up there.

  • Allowing them to enter into a world

  • that would be unattainable without language.

  • [babbling]

  • I think that would suit you.

  • [Amelia] Look at this. Wow!

  • [man] Human language is sophisticated and complex,

  • allowing us to have poetry, fiction...

  • There's lots and lots of people that make it.

  • So, see all those little bits?

  • Including the ability to transmit this huge repertoire

  • from one generation to another, to another, to another, to another,

  • and what makes human civilization possible.

  • [Rich hums]

  • [Rich] Whoa!

  • Into the space shuttle!

  • Whoa!

  • -Watch your head. -This is where we cook space spaghetti.

  • And then you ask the question,

  • how do they learn language?

  • That's the escape hatch.

  • [imitates an explosion]

  • So that they, too, can be part of the stream

  • of human civilization.

  • [theme music playing]

  • [toy boings loudly]

  • [Amelia] Which one?

  • [toy boings]

  • This one?

  • [boinging continues]

  • [Rich] Boing!

  • Okay, so his stuff is packed.

  • [Amelia] I definitely see him watching us make noises

  • and him trying to grasp what we're asking him to do.

  • [Rich] Do you want to put your ball in here? In there.

  • Good boy.

  • -Ready? -[laughs]

  • [strains] One, two, three!

  • [in Scottish accent] Let's go for a drive.

  • -Should I put the address in? -Nah, it's good. I know where we're going.

  • [babbling happily]

  • Bah-dum.

  • [Amelia] It must be phenomenal what is going on in their brain.

  • [babbling happily]

  • [Amelia and Rich imitate Pascoe's babbling]

  • [Amelia] It blows my mind that you can learn a language

  • when you don't even know what a language is.

  • [Rich] You've got lots of things to say.

  • Okay, arm.

  • [Amelia] It's pretty crazy that a child's brain can do that.

  • [Rich] You gonna come out? [strains]

  • [car horns honking]

  • [woman] When I was in college, I was headed toward being a musician.

  • And I guess I was lured by...

  • things like psychology and the study of language.

  • [kids squealing and laughing]

  • [indistinct chatter]

  • [Kathy] So one day, I'm just sitting at the pool

  • and seeing these kids at play,

  • and this little girl comes out of the pool

  • and she is so upset.

  • She's about three, I guess her brother's maybe six,

  • and he has a whole team of folks in there

  • playing with this big red rubber ball.

  • [Kathy] And she begins to tell her mom

  • how upset she is that she wasn't included in the ballgame.

  • But she did so with the sophisticated grammar

  • and language skills of an adult,

  • and I thought, "My gosh."

  • [water splashing]

  • [Kathy] I think that we have "ah-ha" moments.

  • And the ah-ha moment in the pool was to say,

  • "Wow.

  • Look at what these kids are doing

  • so early on with language."

  • I wanted to understand that.

  • [car engine revving]

  • Play with this little fella.

  • Yeah.

  • Should we go in there?

  • What's in there?

  • How are you doing?

  • [laughter]

  • [Amelia] How are you?

  • Hey, buddy. How's it going?

  • [Rich] You good? Yeah.

  • [woman] That's gorgeous.

  • [Kathy] It's actually taken for granted

  • that we're going to know how language must work

  • because we do it every day,

  • because we're surrounded by it every minute.

  • [indistinct chatter]

  • [garbled dialogue]

  • [Kathy] For the babies,

  • it's just a flow.

  • [garbled dialogue]

  • [garbled dialogue]

  • [garbled dialogue]

  • [Kathy] And they don't know any of the words yet.

  • [garbled dialogue]

  • [Kathy] Think of what that baby needs to do to crack the system.

  • They're hearing the melodies of speech

  • as if it just is ongoing all the time in the environment.

  • [garbled dialogue]

  • Hey!

  • [Kathy] The real question is how they can dig into this flowing sound source,

  • these ribbons of melodies.

  • How do they get in there, carve 'em up,

  • so that they can eventually solve the big problem

  • of mapping sound to language?

  • -Ooh! -[Amelia] Ooh!

  • [babbling]

  • [Pascoe babbles]

  • [mewling]

  • [mewling]

  • [Amelia] He's getting better at sort of communicating with us.

  • and we're getting better at understanding what the noises actually mean.

  • [babbling]

  • [Amelia] Hello.

  • [Amelia] The tone, or the way that he says it, sort of says a lot more

  • than the actual noise that he's making.

  • "Dada."

  • "Dada"?

  • -Dada. -[Rich] Yes.

  • Who's that?

  • -Dada. -[Rich] Yes!

  • Ready?

  • [crowd applauding]

  • [Rich] Is Mummy coming?

  • [crowd cheering]

  • [Kathy] If you listen carefully, symphonies have embedded melodies

  • and the same melody keeps cropping up,

  • and the same thing is true in language.

  • [ride-goers screaming]

  • Language has its own kind of sounds.

  • When we want to ask a question...

  • [in light tone] ...we go up.

  • And when we want to make a statement...

  • [in lower tone] ...you can see that I have a harsher kind of pattern in tone

  • and then it goes down.

  • [Kathy] So I wondered whether noticing those melodies

  • could be one way in which babies

  • could break into the sound stream

  • and find the units of language,

  • the words, the phrases, and the sentences.

  • [animal chirping]

  • [Kathy] You know, 40 years ago we were very much out on a limb.

  • There was nobody, literally no one in the world,

  • who I could find who was doing music and language together.

  • No one was touching it.

  • What should we play with?

  • -Yeah? -[baby laughs]

  • [Kathy] So we pulled a team together...

  • and did an experiment to ask,

  • "Could these melodies of language, the patterns,