As most parents of small children will reluctantly admit, nothing can occupy a child quite like television. Unfortunately, the scientific evidence suggests that using the boob tube as a babysitter has ...
Mothers tend to speak less to infants when they're on their smartphones, a new study finds. Moms talked 16% less to their babies when they were fiddling with their phone, researchers found. Shorter 1- ...
Researchers made a surprising discovery about infant language development. Babies recognize familiar voices and languages before they are even born Researchers stress that this discovery does not mean ...
The science is clear: rich language exposure sets the foundation for success in school and life, including health. Early healthy brain development fuels Talk With Me Baby (TWMB), a groundbreaking ...
A recent study published in the journal Infancy found that babies’ ability to match speech to faces predicted their future language abilities. The study followed 103 children from age three months to ...
Across social media, babies are doing something that has viewers completely mesmerized—laughing together as if they understand every babbled word. What started as a handful of clips has grown into a ...
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Caregiver smartphone use can affect a baby’s development. New parents should get more guidance
New research shows caregivers don’t get advice on smartphone use, even though we know it can affect a baby’s feeding, ...
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A mother's voice could be the key to boosting brain and language growth in premature babies
The sound of a mother's voice can help boost newborn language development in premature babies. A new study, published in "Frontiers in Human Neuroscience" on October 13, hoped to find a link between ...
Having a television in earshot is enough to significantly reduce an infant's exposure to the spoken words of parents and other adults, and to reduce an infant's own vocalizations and verbal exchanges, ...
Language and conversation is our lifeblood. And that’s even true, scientists say, if one of the “speakers” may not have fully developed language skills. Led by Dr. Betty Vohr, a professor of ...
John Spencer receives funding from the US National Institutes of Health. Talking to your baby or toddler shapes the structure of their brain, my colleagues and I have discovered. For the study, which ...
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