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Crying babies trigger heightened pain perception in adults: Study

Researchers find irregular acoustic patterns in baby cries not only heighten adults’ perception of pain but also their facial temperature

Necva Tastan Sevinc  | 11.09.2025 - Update : 11.09.2025
Crying babies trigger heightened pain perception in adults: Study

ISTANBUL 

A new study found that the cries of human babies, especially when expressing pain, carry unique acoustic features that make them particularly difficult for adults to ignore.

Researchers from France’s University of Saint-Etienne and collaborating institutions discovered that so-called "nonlinear phenomena" – irregularities in the sound of a baby’s cry such as sudden pitch jumps, vocal roughness, or chaotic vibrations – strongly influence how adults perceive infant distress

By analyzing over 300 recordings of baby cries during routine situations like bathing as well as during painful experiences such as vaccinations, scientists observed that cries associated with pain were longer and contained more of these nonlinear acoustic traits.

Playback experiments with both natural and computer-synthesized cries showed that adult listeners consistently rated cries with these features as expressing higher levels of pain

The study also revealed that these cries trigger physiological changes in adult listeners.

Using facial thermal imaging, the researchers showed that a baby’s pain cries can raise a listener’s facial temperature, a marker of autonomic nervous system activity.

This thermal response was more synchronized with cries containing strong nonlinear phenomena, indicating that the pain encoded in a baby’s cry generates an immediate emotional reaction before engaging higher-order cognitive processes.

“Among the different phenomena, chaos was the most powerful driver of perceived pain,” the authors said, noting that both parents and non-parents responded to these cues, though parents were generally more sensitive.

The findings highlight how infant cries encode vital information for survival, ensuring caregivers pay attention to signs of distress.

According to the authors, the research could support the development of new vocal- and physiology-based tools for assessing and monitoring babies’ needs in pediatric care.


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