This analysis revealed that daily music exposure during the third trimester of pregnancy is linked to more robust speech stimuli coding.
“The musical stimulus reaches the auditory system with low-frequency rhythmic components that train it to organize neural plasticity,” explained Sonia Arenillas-Alcón, the study’s first author.
Additionally, the team discovered that music exposure during pregnancy has no impact on the speed of neural transmission right after birth.
This is “in contrast with the faster processing speed of auditory and speech stimuli reported in musically trained adults,” according to the study.
While this is just the first step toward a potential clinical application, the researchers noted that follow-up studies are needed.
Still, Professor Carles Escera– the study’s leader– believes the potential benefits are significant.
“Children with attenuated brain response, for example, underweight born babies, could benefit from a musical intervention program,” Escera said.
To read the study’s complete findings, visit the link here.
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