New Study Reveals Chicks Exhibit Human-Like Bouba-Kiki Effect, Suggesting Deep Evolutionary Roots

February 19, 2026
New Study Reveals Chicks Exhibit Human-Like Bouba-Kiki Effect, Suggesting Deep Evolutionary Roots
  • A new Science study shows newborn chicks associate bouba with round shapes and kiki with spiky shapes, indicating the bouba-kiki effect occurs in nonhuman animals and may not be unique to human language evolution.

  • When hearing bouba, about 80% of chicks approached the rounded shape and spent over three minutes exploring it, while the spiky shape drew lesser interest; the reversed pattern occurred with kiki.

  • Experts contextualize the finding as shifting focus from language origins to general cognitive perception, with some arguing the effect may be prelanguage and rooted in basic cognition.

  • The article includes a call to support Scientific American journalism.

  • Attribution notes Cody Cottier as author with Allison Parshall as editor, and references to related studies in humans and other animals.

  • Earlier attempts to find the effect in other primates failed, fueling debate about whether this is uniquely human.

  • Initial hypotheses about resemblance to words or letters gave way to cross-language and cross-phonetic studies suggesting a general human perceptual tendency rather than language-specific factors.

  • Findings support that sound-shape linkages could be part of a shared perceptual base predating language, possibly influencing symbolic communication.

  • Published in Science, the study adds to cross-modal correspondences across species, linking sound properties to object attributes like size or weight.

  • The evolutionary distance between birds and humans highlights the surprising breadth of this perceptual bias, raising questions about its origins.

  • Researchers see these results as evidence that basic cross-modal sound-shape associations exist very early in vertebrates, hinting at deep evolutionary roots.

  • Chicks at ages three days and one day were tested, linking looks to sounds and mirroring the human bouba-kiki pattern in very young birds.

Summary based on 4 sources


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