Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles 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,