New Straits Times

Babies can recognise rhymes they heard in the womb, suggests study

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SCIENCE agrees that lullabies can be beneficial for babies — that’s why parents have been singing them to their children since before they were born.

Now, Austrian researcher­s have discovered that babies as young as a few weeks old are able to recognise nursery rhymes they heard when they were in their mother’s womb.

Researcher­s from the University of Salzburg came to this understand­ing after conducting an experiment with around 60 pregnant women.

The women had their babies listen to two German nursery rhymes through speakers placed on their abdomens, twice a day from the 34th week of pregnancy.

Two weeks after delivery, the newborns listened to one of the nursery rhymes they had encountere­d in utero, and another they had never heard before. During this phase of the experiment, the infants’ brain activity was recorded so that the scientists could determine whether the babies were familiar with the nursery rhymes they were listening to, and to what extent they paid attention to them.

It appeared that babies had an easier time following the nursery rhymes they first listened to in the womb. The researcher­s found that unfamiliar nursery rhymes elicited a stronger electrical brain response in babies, suggesting that they put more cognitive effort into listening to them.

The authors of this research, published on the pre-publicatio­n website bioRxiv, conclude that babies can recognise nursery rhymes they heard before they were born.

They seem to be sensitive to musicality and prosody while still in their mother’s womb, as if their brains were already equipped to differenti­ate one sound from another.

 ?? PICTURE CREDIT: ETX DAILY UP ?? Babies seem to be sensitive to musicality and prosody while still in the womb.
PICTURE CREDIT: ETX DAILY UP Babies seem to be sensitive to musicality and prosody while still in the womb.
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