A new research suggests that
listening to music improves kids cognitive skills and help them learn language
faster
Music can improve cognitive
skills of babies and can help them learn language quickly, a new study
suggests.
“Our study is the first in
young babies to suggest that experiencing a rhythmic pattern in music can also
improve the ability to detect and make predictions about rhythmic patterns in
speech,” said lead researcher Christina Zhao from I-LABS.
“This means that early,
engaging musical experiences can have a more global effect on cognitive
skills.”
To find out the effect of
music on infant’s brain, researchers involved 39 babies alongside their parents
in a lab experiment. Babies were 9 months old and were divided into groups. All
of them went through play sessions for a month with each session lasting not
more than 12 to 15 minutes.
In one group what they call
‘music group,’ recordings of children’s music were played where a member from
the research team taught the babies and the parents how to synchronize with the
beat and music.
The other group attended
play sessions without music. Those controlled sessions involved cars, blocks
and other toys and coordination among participants to play with those toys.
“In both the music and
control groups, we gave babies experiences that were social, required their
active involvement and included body movements - these are all characteristics
that we know help people learn,” Zhao said. “The key difference was whether the
babies were moving to learn a musical rhythm.”
After the end of the
experiments, babies were brought back to the lab so their responses can be
measured. Babies listened to a series of music and speech sound in a rhythmic
way with occasional disruption. In the meantime, they had their brains
scanned too. During the scanning, a specific activity was noticed which
indicated that babies could detect flaws and disruption.
Brain scanning showed that
music group had strong responses to the disruption in those regions of the
brains that are associated with cognitive skills, attention and detection of
patterns compared to those in the controlled group.
When infants recognized the
pattern of activity or learned how to synchronize with music, it improved their
overall learning ability as well. They have in their mind what is going to
happen next and if it does not go the same way they expected, they realize it
too.
“Infants experience a
complex world in which sounds, lights and sensations vary constantly. Pattern
perception is an important cognitive skill, and improving that ability early
may have long-lasting effects on learning,” said co-author Patricia Kuhl.
“This research reminds us
that the effects of engaging in music go beyond music itself. Music experience
has the potential to boost broader cognitive skills that enhance children’s
ability to detect, expect and react quickly to patterns in the world, which is
highly relevant in today’s complex world.”
Source: I4U News
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