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Why Aren’t Babies Just Little Adults?

babies in rows swaddled with safety pins
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Why are babies small and grownups big? Why are babies so helpless, instead of little versions of adults? Do babies know they're babies? How do babies grow? How do babies learn to talk?

Kids have been sending us lots of questions about babies! This week we're learning more about the development of the human brain  with Celeste Kidd, professor of psychology and primary investigator at the  Kidd Lab at the University of California Berkeley.

Download our learning guides: PDF | Google Slides | Transcript

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It seems like a really bad idea, right? Human babies rely on adult humans for everything, while babies of some species never meet their parents and are able to take care of themselves as soon as their born! Why is that? 

While researchers aren't sure on this one, Celeste Kidd says there are a lot of theories.

Why do we have to be babies first? - Jeremy, 5, New Jersey

"Because we are very intelligent, we need bigger brains to account for all the things we can do that other animals can't do. If you have a big brain and you're born via live birth - meaning you aren't born from an egg - then there's an upper limit on how big your head can be when you go through the birth canal," she explains.

In other words, we need those big brains to do all the things humans do, but a human head with a fully developed brain can't fit through the birth canal.

"The bigger your head needs to be ultimately, the more immature you need to be born," Celeste says. So we have to develop and grow outside of the womb. We're born with some of our brain power, but our brains keep growing long after we're born, well into our 20s. And there are some advantages to that long period of childhood.

"If you require dependence on your parents for a really long time, which humans do, that creates a lot of opportunity for you to learn a lot of stuff about your culture and the other people that you're being raised with. We have a lot of knowledge that is unique to us as a species, and that's unique to us as social groups," Celeste says.

The long childhood allows for a lot of cultural transmission - learning about tools, language, manners and arts. Some of these exist in other species, but the human systems are a lot more elaborate and take more time to learn!

Melody is the Contributing Editor for But Why: A Podcast For Curious Kids and the co-author of two But Why books with Jane Lindholm.
Jane Lindholm is the host, executive producer and creator of But Why: A Podcast For Curious Kids. In addition to her work on our international kids show, she produces special projects for Vermont Public. Until March 2021, she was host and editor of the award-winning Vermont Public program Vermont Edition.
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