Babies’ Minds
Part of The Truth About Life and Death
First broadcast: Wednesday 09 July 2014
Tiny babies are, from birth, active learners. They don’t wait for the world to come to them. Claudia Hammond explores the very latest research about what influences the developing mind of the new born infant. Dr Caspar Addyman from the Babylab at Birkbeck, University of London, describes the biggest ever internet survey of babies’ laughter, which concludes that babies really do get the joke.
via BBC World Service – Health Check, The Truth About Life and Death, Babies’ Minds.]]>
Babies trying lemons for the first time in slow motion.]]>
Enjoy this video of 2 year old baby Finn screaming with delighted terror as he races along on his little bike. If anything, I’d say he wanted to go faster. And like his dad says, you can bet he will love rollercoasters when he is older.
Finn isn’t at all unusual in this. According to our research one of the best ways to make 3 to 5 month old babies laugh is to dangle them upside down. And we’ve all been a little scared to watch proud new dads throwing their giggling young babies high the air. So why do babies find delight in danger and revel in rough and tumble?
I don’t actually know. Partly it is that they don’t know to be afraid. But that same baby could be scared by a small insect or a rustling curtain in his or her bedroom. So that can’t be the whole story. I suspect it comes down to adrenaline. Excitement and fear both cause your body to react in a similar way, releasing a lot of adrenaline and getting your heart racing. It prepares you to react. When the situation turns out not to be dangerous and there is nothing to react to then there is a sense of relief and excess energy has to be expended somehow.
In the spirit of science, I went on a a few roller coasters at Thorpe Park a few weekends ago. Here’s what happened to my heart rate:
THE NEMESIS


THE SAW


I don’t mind admitting that at some points I was screaming like a little baby.
Thanks to Finn and his family for the video.
Dr. James Sully[/caption]
Laughing babies play an interesting role in the history of British Psychology. Over a hundred years ago they tickled the interest of Dr. James Sully, who worked just round the corner from Birkbeck Babylab at UCL, in Bloomsbury in London.
In fact, Sully was founder of the UK’s first experimental psychology lab at UCL and wrote several early popular books on psychology. These included Studies of Childhood published in 1892 and An Essay on Laughter published in 1902. Compiled from observations of his own children and reports sent in by the general public, laughing babies featured prominently in both books.
I recently learned about a lot more about Sully and his work when I was visited by Dr. Tiffany Watt-Smith, who studies the history of emotions at Queen Mary University of London. She’s written up an acount of our conversation. You can read it here.
Gleeful babies..
In … An Essay on Laughter, Sully expanded his discussion of the significance of laughter in the early years of life. In it, he wondered about the evolutionary purpose of contagious laughing in forging sympathetic bonds between parents and children. Sully also identified different baby laughs – from the ‘sudden glee’ in which ‘the arms flag wing-like or meet in the joyous clap and the whole body jumps’, to the ‘forced laugh’ some children develop in response to a situation they realize they are supposed to find funny.via The Scientist and the Stand-Up | The History of Emotions Blog.Make gleeful scientists..
‘It’s like being a stand-up comic’ says Dr Caspar Addyman, a psychologist investigating infant laughter at the BabyLab at Birkbeck University of London. Showing me around the basement laboratories, their walls painted grey to create a calm environment, Addyman admits he’s ‘full of glee to be doing this’. Here, Addyman and the parents who volunteer their babies to take part in his experiments, gurn, grin and play peekaboo. The giggles they elicit from their tiny experimental subjects are video recorded for later analysis. Addyman is only at the beginning of his research. He hopes to uncover the links between laughter and learning.

Happy Easter, Help us with our research by finding laughing babies on YouTube. We love to see some examples of the following behaviours:
1. Shock turning to delight
2. A baby deliberately making an adult laugh
3. A baby laughing in anticipation of something (being tickled, etc.)
* Bonus – A baby dressed as a rabbit
Send links in the comments below or tweet your finds with the hashtag #laughingbaby Have a Happy Chocolate Eggsmas, Caspar
Related articles
- Ayla’s First Easter Egg Hunt! (pawsandpacifiers.wordpress.com)
- “How To Make Bunny Ears” – Crochet Bunny Hat (youtube.com)
Baby Frederick from Warsaw, Poland has previously appeared on the site laughing at himself in the mirror. This was featured in the recent Daily Mail coverage of our project and we sent Frederick and his family a copy of the paper. His father, Maciej, just sent me this lovely photo of Frederick reading all about himself. He seems quite pleased.
Thanks once again to Frederick and family
Related articles
- Welcome readers of the Daily Mail (laughingbaby.info)
- Your Babies #022: The baby in the mirror (laughingbaby.info)
- Why do babies laugh? That’s what a scientist set out to learn – with tantalising results (dailymail.co.uk)
International Happiness Day. As our small contribution we thought we’d share some wisdom from the happiest people on the planet, laughing babies.
1. People make us happy

2. Challenge yourself every day

3. Be present

- Today is happiness day, but could greater happiness be a permanent reality? (blogs.bbk.ac.uk)
- TODAY – London School of Laughter Yoga at Royal Festival Hall (meetup.com)
- It’s morning (manymeans.blogspot.co.uk)
- 10 Benefits Of Laughter (healthylifestyleplus.com)
- 10 Reasons Why Laughter is Good for You! (jimvillamor.wordpress.com)
- Resilient Syrian Children Find Play, Laughter (nbcnews.com)
- Q. Why do we laugh? A. Because we are happy. (laughingbaby.info)
Related articles
]]>featured in the Daily Mail today. So if you saw us there, thank you for visiting our site. We hope you like our laughing babies and all the hard work they are doing for science. There are three ways you can help our research:
- Share your own stories of what makes your babies laugh the most.
- Send us your laughing baby videos.
- Tell your friends. More babies = more data = better science = more laughter. Click the share buttons at the end of this article
Cosmo laughing at just 3 weeks old

Frederick laughing at his own reflection
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l51CWrwLtEQ Read our explanation of why Frederick finds this funny.Dominic – a world record holder
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0B7YiFODRFA At just three months Dominic is the youngest ever baby fan of ripping paper. He is less than half the age of famous internet star Baby Micah. The fact that a baby as young as Dominic finds this funny is a real challenge to our understanding of their knowledge of the world. Read more here.Caspar on the BBC News
