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HomeEntertainmentUnlocking Language: How Musical Rhythm Detection in Babies Boosts Early Development

Unlocking Language: How Musical Rhythm Detection in Babies Boosts Early Development

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Recent research suggests that music could be a key factor in how infants start grasping language concepts. The study delves into how babies react to rhythm and sound, shedding light on this intriguing possibility.

Mom and baby playing piano. Photo Credit: Freepik.com

Published in the journal Developmental Science, the study reveals that infants with a keen sense of rhythm in music also excel at identifying speech patterns. This skill is crucial for word acquisition in early language development.

Jordyn Koveleski Gorman, a pediatric speech-language pathologist and founder of the online resource Eat Play Say, explained in an interview with Parents, “Both music and language rely on patterns—just as beats form music, syllables combine to create words in speech.”

Gorman continued, “If a baby’s brain is adept at recognizing and following patterns in sound, this ability can significantly aid in early language learning.”

Dr. Rachel Albert, a psychology professor at Lebanon Valley College and director of the LVC Baby Lab, concurred with Gorman’s observations, emphasizing the interconnectedness of musical and linguistic pattern recognition.

“Babies are born pattern detectors,” she said, “and this study highlights the parallels between music and language, both of which contain highly patterned sounds.”

Baby playing musical instrument. Photo Credit: Adobe Stock Images

Researchers observed 44 infants between 6 and 9 months old. To conduct the study, babies wore EEG caps that measured brain activity while they listened to two types of sound: made-up speech with repeating syllables and simple musical rhythms.

“EEG studies involving infants are always challenging, because the infants need to wear a cap with electrodes and cables attached to it on their head during the session,” explained lead author Iris van der Wulp to Parents. To help keep them comfortable, babies sat on a parent’s lap and played with toys during testing.

The results showed that babies whose brainwaves synchronized with musical rhythm also synchronized with repeating word patterns in speech.

“Infants who accurately synchronized their brainwaves to the meter of a musical rhythm also accurately synchronized their brainwaves to words in an artificial language,” van der Wulp stated. “This indicates that there is indeed an overlap in the way that infants process music and language.”

Mom singing to child. Photo Credit: Adobe Stock Images

The study also challenged the idea that rhythm skills are inherited. “It had previously been proposed that musical rhythmic abilities are genetically heritable,” van der Wulp said. “However, we did not find evidence that this was the case.”

Instead, babies whose parents reported making music with them more often showed stronger rhythm skills. “Based on these results I would recommend parents to spend time making music and listening to music together with their child, as our results indicate that this can be beneficial to both their child’s musical and linguistic development,” van der Wulp added.

“You don’t need to be musical. You don’t need to sing on key,” Gorman said. “You just need to be willing to sing, clap, bounce, and be silly with your baby.”

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