When speaking to young kids, humans often use squeaky, high-pitched baby talk. It turns out that some dolphins do, too. Bottlenose dolphin moms modify their individually distinctive whistles when ...
Aliza Chasan is a Digital Content Producer for "60 Minutes" and CBSNews.com. She has previously written for outlets including PIX11 News, The New York Daily News, Inside Edition and DNAinfo. Aliza ...
Love it or hate it, but the way humans modify their speech when they communicate with their young offspring, commonly known as "baby talk," has now been recorded among bottlenose dolphin mothers, too.
The sight of chubby baby cheeks is often enough to transform even the most committed curmudgeon into a babbling softie. Sentences become shorter, sounds are exaggerated, and the overall pattern of ...
Dolphin moms communicate with their offspring in a form of baby talk similar to humans, a new study has found. According to research published this week, female bottlenose dolphins use a higher pitch ...
The park announced the birth of a baby bottlenose calf to first-time mother Koko, who is 13. The calf was born on May 26 and is estimated to be around 30 pounds and measures about three feet in length ...