New York Post

How a mom’s voice impacts baby

How a mother’s voice imprints on a baby’s brain — even in the womb

- by KATE FEHLHABER From Aeon Media

It is no surprise that a child prefers its mother’s voice to those of strangers. Beginning in the womb, a fetus’ developing auditory pathways sense the sounds and vibrations of its mother. Soon after birth, a child can identify its mother’s voice and will work to hear her voice better over unfamiliar female voices. A2014 study of pre-term infants showed that playing a recording of the mother’s voice when babies sucked on a pacifier was enough to improve developmen­t of oral feeding skills and shorten their hospital stay. A mother’s voice can soothe a child in stressful situations, reducing levels of cortisol, the stress hormone, and increasing levels of oxytocin, the social bonding hormone. Scientists have even traced the power of a mother’s voice to infants’ brains: Amother’s voice activates the anterior prefrontal cortex and the left posterior temporal region more strongly than an unfamiliar voice, priming the infant for the specialize­d task of speech processing.

While it makes intuitive sense that a mother’s voice has special power over infants and toddlers, what happens as children grow up?

Daniel Abrams, a neurobiolo­gist at Stanford University School of Medicine, and his team of researcher­s set out to answer this question using functional MRI (fmri), a neuroimagi­ng technique that measures brain activity by detecting metabolic changes in blood flow.

The researcher­s examined 24 children between the ages of 7 and 12, who had normal IQs, had no developmen­t disorders and were raised by their biological mothers.

While in the MRI machine, these children listened to recordings of nonsense words spoken by their mothers or by other women. The researcher­s specifical­ly chose nonsense words so as not to trigger brain circuits related to semantics. Regardless, the children were able to accurately identify their mother’s voice more than 97 percent of the time in less than one second.

But what actually happened when these older children heard their mother’s voice?

The team hypothesiz­ed that listening to her voice would produce more activity in the so-called “voice-selective” brain regions, involved in recognizin­g voice and processing speech, compared with when they heard unfamiliar female voices.

But what the scientists found was even more remarkable. A mother’s voice activated a wide range of brain structures including the amygdala, which regulates emotion, the nucleus accumbens and medial prefrontal cortex, which are part of a major reward circuit, and the fusiform face area, which processes visual face informatio­n.

This pattern of brain activity can be likened to a neural fingerprin­t, where a mother’s voice triggers specific activity in her child’s brain.

The investigat­ion didn’t stop there. The team found that the more neural connection between these “voice-selective” brain regions and those related to mood, reward and face processing, the more social communicat­ion abilities a child had.

In other words, the neural fingerprin­t of a mother’s voice within a child’s brain can predict that child’s ability to communicat­e in the social realm.

If that neural fingerprin­t is thought of as a biomarker in a child’s brain, then how different does it look in children with disorders in social function, such as autism? And how does the neural fingerprin­t change in adolescenc­e and into adulthood?

The answers to these questions remain unknown, but it is now scientific­ally proven that most of us carry a mother’s voice in the neural patterns of our brain: bedtime stories, dinnertime conversati­on and the chatter we heard before birth identify us, uniquely, as surely as the fingerprin­t, enabling emotional developmen­t and social communicat­ion in childhood and, probably, through life.

 ??  ?? Recent studies have proven that infants not only know their mother’s voice, but work extra hard to hear her over other female voices.
Recent studies have proven that infants not only know their mother’s voice, but work extra hard to hear her over other female voices.

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