Dear colleagues,

My co-authors and I are pleased to announce our recent publication in Science:

Arnon I, Kirby S, Allen JA, Garrigue C, Carroll EL, Garland EC (2025) Whale 
song shows language-like statistical structure. Science 387 (6734), 649-653.

ABSTRACT
Humpback whale song is a culturally transmitted behavior. Human language, which 
is also culturally transmitted, has statistically coherent parts whose 
frequency distribution follows a power law. These properties facilitate 
learning and may therefore arise because of their contribution to the faithful 
transmission of language over multiple cultural generations. If so, we would 
expect to find them in other culturally transmitted systems. In this study, we 
applied methods based on infant speech segmentation to 8 years of humpback 
recordings, uncovering in whale song the same statistical structure that is a 
hallmark of human language. This commonality, in two evolutionarily distant 
species, points to the role of learning and cultural transmission in the 
emergence of properties thought to be unique to human language.

The paper is available here: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adq7055

You can also email me (e...@st-andrews.ac.uk<mailto:e...@st-andrews.ac.uk>) for 
a PDF copy.

Kind regards,
Ellen
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Dr Ellen C. Garland  (she/her)
Royal Society University Research Fellow
Email: e...@st-andrews.ac.uk<mailto:e...@st-andrews.ac.uk>
Ph: +44 (0)7478-649964
WWW: https://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/biology/people/ecg5
Bluesky: @ellengarland.bsky.social
Sea Mammal Research Unit (SMRU), Scottish Oceans Institute, School of Biology, 
University of St Andrews
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The University of St Andrews is a charity registered in Scotland: No SC013532
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