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Music and your unborn child

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    Music and your unborn child

    Does music affect fetal development?

    No one knows for sure. Some studies indicate that fetuses can hear and react to sound by moving. But no one really knows what those movements mean because experts can't observe an unborn baby as easily as a baby that has already been born.
    Can playing music for my baby while she's in the womb make her smarter?

    No research supports this conclusion. You may have heard that exposure to music makes kids of all ages smarter in math, but Gordon Shaw, a research pioneer in neuroscience at the University of California at Irvine, says these studies focused on older children, not fetuses.

    For example, piano lessons may enhance children's spatial reasoning skills (the ability to understand three-dimensional space), but researchers only tested 3- and 4-year-olds (see our article on Music and Your Toddler/Preschooler). Some experts surmise that if music has this profound effect on older kids, babies and even fetuses may benefit from it the same way.

    Others say newborns can recognize music their parents played for them when they were in the womb and even perk up or fall asleep when they hear a familiar song. But Janet DiPietro, a developmental psychologist who studies fetal development at Johns Hopkins University, says these conclusions are purely anecdotal and aren't based on true research.

    Some also say that fetuses breathe in time to music they enjoy. California obstetrician Rene Van de Carr says he's observed a 33-week-old fetus pattern his breathing to the beat of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. Van de Carr, who wrote While You're Expecting...Your Own Prenatal Classroom, says because the fetus followed the rhythm of the symphony, it's obvious he learned something about the rhythm and enjoyed it. But other researchers such as DiPietro ask, "What reason do we have to think that breathing in time to music is a good thing?"


    How cute!

    http://www.babycenter.com/0_music-an...-child_6547.bc
    Ludwig van Beethoven
    Den Sie wenn Sie wollten
    Doch nicht vergessen sollten

    #2
    Likely it is a very bad idea to have rock and pop music played while a baby is in the womb, or even around a growing child--perhaps not even during the first 18-20 years of their life. Buy I am sure many babies are exposed not only to rock, rap, hip hop, etc. but also at excessive volume levels. A wonder the world is so messed up. Everyone should be listening to Beethoven and other great classical composers.
    "Life is too short to spend it wandering in the barren Sahara of musical trash."
    --Sergei Vasilyevich Rachmaninoff

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by Harvey View Post
      Likely it is a very bad idea to have rock and pop music played while a baby is in the womb, or even around a growing child--perhaps not even during the first 18-20 years of their life. Buy I am sure many babies are exposed not only to rock, rap, hip hop, etc. but also at excessive volume levels. A wonder the world is so messed up. Everyone should be listening to Beethoven and other great classical composers.
      I nevr had any children, but I tell you if I was expecting I would play the little one Beethoven, Mozart, Chopin, Schubert and the Schumanns all day! I don't listen to pop music and as for rap ...EEK!
      Ludwig van Beethoven
      Den Sie wenn Sie wollten
      Doch nicht vergessen sollten

      Comment

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