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Humpback whale songs have patterns that resemble human language

The sounds that make up humpback whale songs follow some of the same statistical rules seen in human languages, which may be because of how they are learned

By James Woodford

6 February 2025

Humpback whales in the South Pacific

Tony Wu/Nature Picture Library/Alamy

Humpback whale songs have statistical patterns in their structure that are remarkably similar to those seen in human language. While this doesn鈥檛 mean the songs convey complex meanings like our sentences do, it hints that whales may learn their songs in a similar way to how human infants start to understand language.

Only male humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) sing, and the behaviour is thought to be important for attracting mates. The songs are constantly evolving, with new elements appearing and spreading through the population until the old song is completely replaced with a new one.

鈥淲e think it’s a little bit like a standardised test, where everybody’s got to do the same task but you can make changes and embellishments to show that you’re better at the task than everybody else,鈥 says at Griffith University in Gold Coast, Australia.

Instead of trying to find meaning in the songs, Allen and her colleagues were looking for innate structural patterns that may be similar to those seen in human language. They analysed eight years of whale songs recorded around New Caledonia in the Pacific Ocean.

The researchers started by by creating alphanumeric codes to represent every song from every recording, including around 150 unique sounds in total. 鈥淏asically it’s a different grouping of sounds, so one year they might do grunt grunt squeak, and so we’ll have AAB, and then another year they might have moan squeak grunt, and so that would be CBA,鈥 says Allen.

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Once all the songs had been encoded, a team of linguists had to figure out how best to analyse so much data. The breakthrough came when the researchers decided to use an analysis technique that applies to how infants discover words, called transitional probability.

鈥淪peech is continuous and there are no pauses between words, so infants have to discover word boundaries,鈥 says at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. 鈥淭o do this, they use low-level statistical information: specifically, sounds are more likely to occur together if they are part of the same word. Infants use these dips in the probability that one sound follows another to discover word boundaries.鈥

For example, in the phrase 鈥減retty flowers鈥, a child intuitively recognises that the syllables 鈥減re鈥 and 鈥渢ty鈥 are more likely to go together than 鈥渢ty鈥 and 鈥渇low鈥. 鈥淚f whale song has a similar statistical structure, these cues should be useful for segmenting it as well,鈥 says Arnon.

Using the alphanumeric versions of the whale songs, the team calculated the transitional probabilities between consecutive sound elements, making a cut when the next sound element was surprising given the previous one.

鈥淭hose cuts divide the song into segmented sub-sequences,鈥 says Arnon. 鈥淲e then looked at their distribution and found, amazingly, that they follow the same distribution found across all human languages.鈥

In this pattern, called a Zipfian distribution, the prevalence of less common words drops off in a predictable way. The other striking discovery is that the most common whale sounds tend to be short, just as the most common human words are 鈥 a rule known Zipf’s law of abbreviation.

at the University of Sydney, who wasn鈥檛 involved in the study, says it is a novel way of analysing whale song. 鈥淲hat it means is that if you analyse War and Peace, the most frequent word will be twice as frequent as the next and so on 鈥 and the researchers have identified a similar pattern in whale songs,鈥 he says.

Team member at the University of Edinburgh, UK, says he didn’t think the method would work. 鈥淚鈥檒l never forget the moment that graph appeared, looking just like the one we know so well from human language,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his made us realise that we鈥檇 uncovered a deep commonality between these two species, separated by tens of millions of years of evolution.鈥

However, the researchers emphasise that this statistical pattern doesn’t lead to the conclusion that whale song is a language that conveys meaning as we would understand it. They suggest that a possible reason for the commonality is that both whale song and human language are learned culturally.

鈥淭he physical distribution of words or sounds in language is a really fascinating feature, but there’s a million other things about language that are just entirely different from whale song,鈥 says Enfield.

published this week, at Stony Brook University in New York found that other marine mammals may also have structural similarities to human language in their communication.

Menzerath’s law, which predicts that sentences with more words should be composed of shorter words, was present in 11 out of 16 cetacean species studied. Zipf’s law of abbreviation was found in two out of five species where available data made it possible to detect.

鈥淭aken together, our studies suggest that humpback whale song has evolved to be more efficient and easier to learn, and that these features can be found at the level of notes within phrases, and phrases within songs,鈥 says Youngblood.

鈥淚mportantly, the evolution of these songs is both biological and cultural. Some features, like Menzerath’s law, may emerge through the biological evolution of the vocal apparatus, whereas other features, like Zipf’s rank-frequency law [the Zipfian distribution], may require the cultural transmission of songs between individuals,鈥 he says.

Journal reference:

Science

Journal reference:

Science Advances

Topics:

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