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benefits of prenatal music
music for unborn baby brain development
playing unborn baby music
pregnancy music for unborn baby
prenatal learning with music
prenatal music therapy
The fetus lives in a stimulating matrix of sound, vibration,
and motion. Many studies now confirm that voices reach the womb. A mother's
voice is particularly powerful because it is transmitted to the womb through
her own body reaching the fetus in a stronger form than outside sounds. Some
musical sounds can cause changes in metabolism. "Brahm's Lullabye,"
for example, played six times a day for five minutes in a premature baby
nursery produced faster weight gain than voice sounds played on the same
schedule. Researchers in Belfast have demonstrated that reactive listening
begins at 16 weeks g.a. This is especially significant because reactive
listening begins eight weeks before the ear is structurally complete at about
24 weeks. These findings indicate the complexity of hearing, lending support to
the idea that receptive hearing begins with the skin and skeletal framework,
skin being a multireceptor organ integrating input from vibrations, thermo
receptors, and pain receptors. This primal listening system is then amplified
with vestibular and cochlear information as it becomes available.
At 16 weeks the unborn baby is particularly receptive to its
mother’s voice. This is because the vibrations that travel through her body to
the womb are stronger than noises coming from outside the womb. At 20 – 24
weeks, the unborn baby can recognize the deeper tones of its father's voice.
Around 24 weeks
Babies develop preferences for music while in the womb.
Fridman (2000)[3] found that the babies’ heart rates increased and that they
moved around in rhythm to the music. Once born, the infant responds more to
certain music.
From 24 weeks
Unborn babies respond to the rhythm of being read to. They
will move about and kick. Studies by DeCasper and Fifer (1980)[7] and Kolata
(1984)[8] found that infants who were read 'A Cat in a Hat' twice a day 6.5
weeks before birth would suck more if they heard 'A Cat in a Hat' read by their
mother rather than an unfamiliar children’s poem 'The King, the Mice, and the
Cheese', also read by the infants’ mothers.
The parents of the unborn child can stimulate their infant
and develop early communication skills by introducing their child to music and
reading right from the start. The development of listening before birth is
vital to the progression of listening and attention skills after birth.
The uterus isn't exactly the quietest place to hang out. Not
only can a baby hear the sounds of his mom's body—her stomach growling, her
heart beating, the occasional hiccup or burp—but he can also hear noises from
beyond.
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