Dear Dr. Qwerty,
Below is a link to the forthcoming BBS target article
The Signal Functions of Early Infant Crying
by
Joseph Soltis
http://www.bbsonline.org/Preprints/Soltis-11072002/Referees/
This article has been accepted for publication in Behavioral and Brain
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The Signal Functions of Early Infant Crying
Joseph Soltis
National Institutes of Health
ABSTRACT: In this article I evaluate recent attempts to illuminate the
human infant cry from an evolutionary perspective. Infants are born into
an uncertain parenting environment, which can range from indulgent care of
offspring to infanticide. Infant cries are in large part adaptations that
maintain proximity to and elicit care from caregivers. There is not strong
evidence for acoustically distinct cry types, however, but infant cries
may function as a graded signal. During pain-induced autonomic nervous
system arousal, for example, neural input to the vocal cords increases cry
pitch. Caregivers may use this acoustic information, together with other
cues, to guide care-giving behavior. Serious pathology, on the other hand,
results in chronically and severely abnormal cry acoustics. Such abnormal
crying may be a proximate cause of adaptive infant maltreatment, in
circumstances in which parents cut their losses and reduce or withdraw
investment from infants with low survival chances.
An increase in the amount of crying during the first few months of life is
a human universal, and excessive crying, or colic, represents the upper
end of this normal increase. Potential signal functions of excessive
crying include manipulation of parents to acquire additional resources,
honest signaling of need, and honest signaling of vigor. Current evidence
does not strongly support any of these hypotheses, but the evidence is
most consistent with the hypothesis that excessive early infant crying is
a signal of vigor that evolved to reduce the risk of a reduction or
withdrawal of parental care.
KEYWORDS: colic, crying, early infant crying, honest signaling,
infanticide, parental care, parent-offspring conflict, separation call,
vocalization.
http://www.bbsonline.org/Preprints/Soltis-11072002/Referees/
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Jeffrey Gray
Editor
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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