Developmental origins of natural sound perception

Front Psychol. 2024 Dec 11:15:1474961. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1474961. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Infants are exposed to a myriad of sounds early in life, including caregivers' speech, songs, human-made and natural (non-anthropogenic) environmental sounds. While decades of research have established that infants have sophisticated perceptual abilities to process speech, less is known about how they perceive natural environmental sounds. This review synthesizes current findings about the perception of natural environmental sounds in the first years of life, emphasizing their role in auditory development and describing how these studies contribute to the emerging field of human auditory ecology. Some of the existing studies explore infants' responses to animal vocalizations and water sounds. Infants demonstrate an initial broad sensitivity to primate vocalizations, which narrows to human speech through experience. They also show early recognition of water sounds, with preferences for natural over artificial water sounds already at birth, indicating an evolutionary ancient sensitivity. However, this ability undergoes refinement with age and experience. The few studies available suggest that infants' auditory processing of natural sounds is complex and influenced by both genetic predispositions and exposure. Building on these existing results, this review highlights the need for ecologically valid experimental paradigms that better represent the natural auditory environments humans evolved in. Understanding how children process natural soundscapes not only deepens our understanding of auditory development but also offers practical insights for advancing environmental awareness, improving auditory interventions for children with hearing loss, and promoting wellbeing through exposure to natural sounds.

Keywords: animal vocalizations; auditory development; children; environmental sounds; human auditory ecology; infants; natural soundscapes; water sounds.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This work was supported by ANR-17-EURE-0017, ANR-20-CE28 Hearbiodiv and ANR-20-CE28 Audieco to CL, as well as the ERC Consolidator Grant “BabyRhythm 773202,” a FARE grant nr. R204MPRHKE from the Italian Ministry for Universities and Research, a PNRR-MAD-2022–12376739 Grant (“SYNPHONIA” Next Generation EU – PNRR M6C2 - Investimento 2.1 Valorizzazione e potenziamento della ricerca biomedica del SSN CUP C93C22009100007) and a MUR 2022WX3FM5 PRIN grant [Bando PRIN 2022 CUP C53D23004290006, Piano Nazionale di Ripresa e Resilienza (PNRR), Missione 4, Componente 2 – Investimento 1.1. “Progetti di ricerca di Rilevante Interesse Nazionale” – PRIN] awarded to JG. Open Access funding provided by Università degli Studi di Padova | University of Padua, Open Science Committee.