The Star Early Edition

Babies language smart in womb

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LONDON: Unborn babies are able to recognise the difference between two languages, scientists have found. Foetuses are able to distinguis­h between English and Japanese even a month before they are born and respond differentl­y to hearing a language they are not familiar with.

The study, published in the journal NeuroRepor­t, was conducted by a team at the University of Kansas, and used a sample of 24 pregnant women in the US. It tested whether foetuses responded differentl­y to the rhythm of a language that was new to them. English and Japanese have very different rhythms; English is spoken in bursts while Japanese has a more regular tempo.

Researcher­s played an audio clip in Japanese followed by one in English, both read by the same person, and used magnetic imaging to measure the foetus’s heart rate. They found that the unborn babies’ heart rates changed when they heard the Japanese language, with which they were unfamiliar, while there was no variation when they heard the clip in English showing that they recognised a rhythmical difference between the two. Experts said the finding suggested language developmen­t begins before birth and the study could pave the way for further research on the neural abilities of unborn babies.

“These results suggest that language developmen­t may indeed start in utero,” said Utako Minai, associate professor of linguistic­s at the University of Kansas and the lead researcher on the study. “Foetuses 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.”

Previous studies have shown that newborn babies respond differentl­y to different languages, but this is the first time a similar finding has been made in unborn children using the most accurate technology available. – The Independen­t

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