Why Humans Love the Same Sounds as Frogs & Crickets? episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 29, 2026 · 22 MIN

Why Humans Love the Same Sounds as Frogs & Crickets?

from The Deep Dive Lab: Unraveling Materials Science · host Son Hoang

Why does birdsong feel like music? Why do frog calls and cricket chirps sound… oddly satisfying? 🐦🐸🎶In this episode, we explore a groundbreaking study published in Science that reveals something astonishing: humans share acoustic preferences with other animals.Based on a global experiment with 4,196 participants, researchers discovered that we consistently prefer the same sounds animals use to attract mates. From the complex “chucks” of the túngara frog to the rhythmic chirps of crickets, our sense of beauty may not be uniquely human—it may be deeply wired into our biology.Even more fascinating? Your brain processes these “beautiful” sounds faster—suggesting that beauty might simply be what your brain finds easiest and most stimulating to decode ⚡🧠This episode dives into:Why Darwin’s idea of a shared “taste for the beautiful” still holds upThe surprising reason you prefer ancient sounds over new ones ⏳The universal acoustic features we just can’t resist (trills, clicks, chucks!) 🎵And what this means for how we experience music, nature, and even art🎧 You’re not just listening to nature… you’re part of it.📚 Source Paper:Humans share acoustic preferences with other animalsScience, 19 Mar 2026, Vol 391, Issue 6791, pp. 1246–1249DOI: 10.1126/science.aea1202#SciencePodcast #Evolution #Darwin #Neuroscience #AnimalBehavior #MusicScience #NatureSounds #Biology #CognitiveScience #SoundOfNature 🎧🌿🔖 Hashtags

Why does birdsong feel like music? Why do frog calls and cricket chirps sound… oddly satisfying? 🐦🐸🎶In this episode, we explore a groundbreaking study published in Science that reveals something astonishing: humans share acoustic preferences with other animals.Based on a global experiment with 4,196 participants, researchers discovered that we consistently prefer the same sounds animals use to attract mates. From the complex “chucks” of the túngara frog to the rhythmic chirps of crickets, our sense of beauty may not be uniquely human—it may be deeply wired into our biology.Even more fascinating? Your brain processes these “beautiful” sounds faster—suggesting that beauty might simply be what your brain finds easiest and most stimulating to decode ⚡🧠This episode dives into:Why Darwin’s idea of a shared “taste for the beautiful” still holds upThe surprising reason you prefer ancient sounds over new ones ⏳The universal acoustic features we just can’t resist (trills, clicks, chucks!) 🎵And what this means for how we experience music, nature, and even art🎧 You’re not just listening to nature… you’re part of it.📚 Source Paper:Humans share acoustic preferences with other animalsScience, 19 Mar 2026, Vol 391, Issue 6791, pp. 1246–1249DOI: 10.1126/science.aea1202#SciencePodcast #Evolution #Darwin #Neuroscience #AnimalBehavior #MusicScience #NatureSounds #Biology #CognitiveScience #SoundOfNature 🎧🌿🔖 Hashtags

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Why Humans Love the Same Sounds as Frogs & Crickets?

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This episode was published on March 29, 2026.

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Why does birdsong feel like music? Why do frog calls and cricket chirps sound… oddly satisfying? 🐦🐸🎶In this episode, we explore a groundbreaking study published in Science that reveals something astonishing: humans share acoustic preferences with...

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