Evidence of the bouba-kiki effect in naïve baby chicks

science.org

189 points by suddenlybananas 2 days ago


bad_username - 2 days ago

Objects that have sharp edges generate higher frequency harmonics when agitated, because lower-size features resonate on higher frequencies (like shorter strings ring on higher pitch). Objects that are round resonate on low frequencies only. The "kiki" sound has more high frequency content than the "bouba" sound, and it's no mystery why the brain associates one with the other.

Strilanc - 2 days ago

For each chick they do 24 trials divided into 4 blocks with retraining on the ambiguous shape and actual rewards after each block. During the actual tests they didn't give rewards. In figure 1 they show the data bucketed by trial index. It's a bit surprising it doesn't show any apparent effect vs trial number, e.g. the first trial after retraining being slightly different.

I have to admit I'm super skeptical there's not some stupid mistake here. Definitely thought provoking. But I wish they'd kept iteratively removing elements until the correlation stopped happening, so they could nail down causation more precisely.

a115ltd - 2 days ago

This is just one micro-instance of a much larger thing. Brain encodes structural similarity across modalities. Corollary: language is far from arbitrary labels for things.

verteu - 2 days ago

Preprint: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.05.17.594640v1....

keyle - 2 days ago

I'm not entirely sold by this discovery. For example when you learn to train dogs, you learn about the 3 voices. Encouraging voice, atta boy, negative voice, more stern, and the big "NO!".

To some degree these words type sounding language are doing the same thing. Some sounds will irk, some will soothe, and it would affect this 'evidence' found.

alienbaby - 2 days ago

Is this not reducible to whether a speech sound contains fricatives and stops or not? They produce spiky sounds

But I guess it's about why so we associate those with spiky shapes, though surely it's because they represent sharp immediate changes in frequency?

I'd be interested on results of shapes imagined when you take the source as musical or other non speech sounds.

jaffa2 - 2 days ago

I think it’s natural to think of this in terms of frequencies so the kiki shape has a higher visual frequency. As does the word have a higher audio frequencies within in than bouba so that is naturally associated with the lower frequency undulating line of that shape.

patcon - 2 days ago

I'm very intrigued by this, but I'll be much more interested when this is replicated on non-domesticated animals...!

It must take some strange things to survive co-evolution with humans for several thousands years

- 2 days ago
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tetris11 - 2 days ago

What's the N value of this study

K0balt - a day ago

I wonder if this is a result of a Fourier transform type operation that turns the serial time domain into something that can be processed in parallel?

saalweachter - a day ago

As someone with a passing familiarity with both baby chicks and experimental setups, I have strong doubts about this research.

crazydoggers - a day ago

Very likely this experiment suffered from a lack of thorough double blind control. Researcher bias may have generated subtle subconscious queues to the chicks on which shape to pick unrelated to the sounds.

gnarlouse - 2 days ago

baba is keke

thesmtsolver2 - 2 days ago

All the universal translators in fiction make more sense now lol.

AreShoesFeet000 - 2 days ago

Believe it or not: This is pure and unadulterated advancement of civilization.