Fetuses might be able to differentiate between languages, a new study from the University of Kansas suggests. Researchers say the differences were clear from changes detected in the fetuses’ heart rhythms.
cognitive development are devilishly difficult to do well,” Moon told CBS News via email, adding that the study is bolstered by the fact that it was led by a linguist.
“This sort of basic research into very early learning and cognition can help in creating therapies for atypical development during a period when the brain is unusually open to change,” Moon said.
Experts believe that robust sound stimulation can make a world of difference in young lives. Over the past 25 years, encouraging parents to talk, read and sing to their babies — behaviors proven to build up babies’ brains — has become a top public health priority.
Those efforts kickstarted in 1995, when another team of University of Kansas researchers reported their stunning findings on the “word gap” between babies in low-income households and babies in higher-income households. The researchers found that by age 3, 카지노게임 a poor child would have heard 30 million fewer words spoken in his or her home environment than a child from a professional family. Those differences were tightly linked to significant differences in IQ and academic success down the road. That research spurred hundreds of follow-up studies and programs to encourage healthier child development, from the local level to the White House.
The new research sheds light on the complexity and sensitivity of fetuses’ brains just before birth.
“Fetuses are tuning their ears to the language they are going to acquire even before they are born, based on the speech signals available to them in utero. Pre-natal sensitivity to the rhythmic properties of language may provide children with one of the very first building blocks in acquiring language,” Minai said.
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