PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Listening to music before you're even born may boost your auditory system

Prenatal music exposure leads to long-lasting changes in the brain after birth

2013-10-31
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Kallie Huss
onepress@plos.org
415-568-3162
Public Library of Science
Listening to music before you're even born may boost your auditory system Prenatal music exposure leads to long-lasting changes in the brain after birth Playing music while you're pregnant may influence your child's auditory system, according to new research published October 30th in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Eino Partanen and colleagues at the University of Helsinki.

It is difficult to know whether fetuses remember the sounds they heard before they are born. Playing Mozart for your baby during pregnancy is very popular, but is there any evidence that this has an effect on your child's brain?

The authors here show that long-term memory can indeed occur in the brain when fetuses are exposed to music before they are born. In their study, they asked pregnant mothers in a "learning group" to play "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star" five times per week during the last trimester of their pregnancy, while another group played no music during the last trimester. The authors then measured the brain activity through the skin of the newborn babies soon after birth and again at four months of age to see if any learning had occurred. When infants heard the original melody as well as a modified melody with some of the notes changed, the authors found that brain activity of the learning group was much stronger to the original, unchanged notes, and this effect lasted even out to four months of age. The period from 27 weeks of gestation to six months of age is critical to the development of the auditory system, and the authors here have shown that prenatal exposure to musical melodies may influence brain development during this critical period. Partanen elaborates, "Even though we've previously shown that fetuses could learn minor details of speech, we did not know how long they could retain the information. These results show that babies are capable of learning at a very young age, and that the effects of the learning remain apparent in the brain for a long time."

INFORMATION:

Citation: Partanen E, Kujala T, Tervaniemi M, Huotilainen M (2013) Prenatal Music Exposure Induces Long-Term Neural Effects. PLoS ONE 8(10): e78946. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0078946

Financial Disclosure: This study was financially supported by the Academy of Finland (grants 128840, 1135304, and 1135161; http://www.aka.fi/eng), ERANET-NEURON (http://www.neuron-eranet.eu/) project Probing the Auditory Novelty System (PANS), the University of Helsinki (http://www.helsinki.fi/university/index.html) graduate school grant and the Finnish Cultural Foundation (http://www.skr.fi/en). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

Competing Interest Statement: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

PLEASE LINK TO THE SCIENTIFIC ARTICLE IN ONLINE VERSIONS OF YOUR REPORT (URL goes live after the embargo ends): http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0078946

Disclaimer: This press release refers to upcoming articles in PLOS ONE. The releases have been provided by the article authors and/or journal staff. Any opinions expressed in these are the personal views of the contributors, and do not necessarily represent the views or policies of PLOS. PLOS expressly disclaims any and all warranties and liability in connection with the information found in the release and article and your use of such information.

About PLOS ONE: PLOS ONE is the first journal of primary research from all areas of science to employ a combination of peer review and post-publication rating and commenting, to maximize the impact of every report it publishes. PLOS ONE is published by the Public Library of Science (PLOS), the open-access publisher whose goal is to make the world's scientific and medical literature a public resource.

All works published in PLOS ONE are Open Access. Everything is immediately available—to read, download, redistribute, include in databases and otherwise use—without cost to anyone, anywhere, subject only to the condition that the original authors and source are properly attributed. For more information about PLOS ONE relevant to journalists, bloggers and press officers, including details of our press release process and our embargo policy, see the everyONE blog at http://everyone.plos.org/media.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

One of the oldest cases of tuberculosis is discovered

2013-10-31
One of the oldest cases of tuberculosis is discovered Scientists verify the presence of tuberculosis from 7,000 years ago Tuberculosis was present in Europe as early as 7000 years ago, according to new research published October 30th in the open-access journal PLOS ...

Baby brains are tuned to the specific actions of others

2013-10-31
Baby brains are tuned to the specific actions of others Observing body movements activates related brain regions in infants Infant brains are surprisingly sensitive to other people's movements, according to new research published October 30th in the open-access journal ...

First results from LUX dark matter detector rule out some candidates

2013-10-31
First results from LUX dark matter detector rule out some candidates Results from the first run of the Large Underground Xenon (LUX) experiment operating a mile underground in the Black Hills of South Dakota, have proven the detector's sensitivity and ruled ...

Babies can learn their first lullabies in the womb

2013-10-31
Babies can learn their first lullabies in the womb The study focused on 24 women during the final trimester of their pregnancies. Half of the women played the melody of Twinkle Twinkle Little Star to their fetuses five days a week for the final stages ...

New SARS-like coronavirus discovered in Chinese horseshoe bats

2013-10-31
New SARS-like coronavirus discovered in Chinese horseshoe bats 10 years after SARS outbreak -- Ecohealth Alliance finds plausible evidence for direct bat to human transmission NEW YORK – October 30, 2013 – EcoHealth Alliance, a nonprofit organization that ...

Mystery planet baffles astronomers

2013-10-31
Mystery planet baffles astronomers Kepler-78b is a planet that shouldn't exist. This scorching lava world circles its star every eight and a half hours at a distance of less than one million miles - one of the tightest known orbits. ...

New multiple action intestinal hormone corrects diabetes

2013-10-31
New multiple action intestinal hormone corrects diabetes Scientists from the Helmholtz Zentrum Muenchen and the Technische Universitaet Muenchen, together with scientists in the USA, have ...

Public insurance fills the health coverage gap, new UCLA analysis shows

2013-10-31
Public insurance fills the health coverage gap, new UCLA analysis shows In the years leading up to implementation of the Affordable Care Act, the percentage of Californians who received their health insurance through public programs continued to rise, ...

New study compares provisional and two-stent strategies for coronary bifurcation lesions

2013-10-31
New study compares provisional and two-stent strategies for coronary bifurcation lesions Results of the Nordic-Baltic Bifurcation IV trial presented at TCT 2013 SAN FRANCISCO, CA – OCTOBER 30, 2013 – A new clinical trial shows that a two-stent technique for treatment of ...

TGen-led research shows ability to do next-generation sequencing for patients with advanced cancers

2013-10-31
TGen-led research shows ability to do next-generation sequencing for patients with advanced cancers Faster analysis of genetic variations should uncover new drug targets and pathways even as cancers mutate beyond initial therapies SCOTTSDALE, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Cannabis legalization is driving increases in marijuana use among U.S. adults with historically lower consumption rates

Multifunctional dipoles enabling enhanced ionic and electronic transport for high‑energy batteries

Triboelectric nanogenerators for future space missions

Advancing energy development with MBene: Chemical mechanism, AI, and applications in energy storage and harvesting

Heteroatom‑coordinated Fe–N4 catalysts for enhanced oxygen reduction in alkaline seawater zinc‑air batteries

Meta-device for precision lateral displacement sensing

Plasma-guided mitotane for the treatment of adrenocortical carcinoma: adjuvant care to advanced disease

Theoretical study of laser-enhanced nuclear fusion reactions

Social environment impacts sleep quality

Optimized kinetic pathways of active hydrogen generation at Cu2O/Cu heterojunction interfaces to enhance nitrate electroreduction to ammonia

New design playbook could unlock next generation high energy lithium ion batteries

Drones reveal how feral horse units keep boundaries

New AI tool removes bottleneck in animal movement analysis

Bubble netting knowledge spread by immigrant humpback whales

Discovery of bats remarkable navigation strategy revealed in new study

Urban tributaries identified as major sources of plastic chemical pollution in the Yangtze River

UK glaucoma cases higher than expected and projected to reach 1.6 million+ by 2060

Type 2 diabetes prevention could more than halve carbon footprint linked to disease complications

Over 1 million estimated to have glaucoma in UK

Early treatment can delay rheumatoid arthritis for years

National childhood type 1 diabetes screening is effective and could prevent thousands of emergency diagnoses, UK study shows

Mix of different types of physical activity may be best for longer life

Continuous care from community-based midwives reduces risk of preterm birth by 45%

Otago experts propose fiber as first new essential nutrient in 50 years

Auburn Physics PhD student earns prestigious DOE Fellowship

AI tool helps you learn how autistic communication works

To show LGBTQ+ support, look beyond Pride Month

Using artificial intelligence to understand how emotions are formed

Exposure to wildfire smoke late in pregnancy may raise autism risk in children

Breaking barriers in lymphatic imaging: Rice’s SynthX Center leads up to $18 million effort for ‘unprecedented resolution and safety’

[Press-News.org] Listening to music before you're even born may boost your auditory system
Prenatal music exposure leads to long-lasting changes in the brain after birth