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Babies
Listen To Babble
(HealthScoutNews)
-- If you think your baby's listening to everything -- the dog
barking, the radio blaring, the kettle whistling -- but you, you
could be right.
She can't
focus on you because she probably is listening to everything,
says a study in a recent issue of The Journal of the Acoustical
Society of America. Babies can't focus on important sounds
the way adults can, the study says. Instead, they listen more
generally, unselectively, to a range of sounds surrounding them.
The problem,
says the study's lead author, Lynne Werner, is that this "makes
babies more susceptible to background noise. It makes it harder
for them to pick out sounds." If you want your baby to attend
to you, she adds, "you might not want to keep the TV on
all day."
Researchers
have known for some time that babies don't hear as well as adults,
says Werner, who is a professor of speech and hearing science
at the University of Washington in Seattle. A sound that adults
can hear must be played much more loudly for a baby to hear, and
this is true until the child is 6 years old or even older.
But why? Some
researchers think a child's brain may not be up to speed yet so
that sounds aren't processed completely. Others think that such
young children may not have learned to focus their attention.
Werner and
her colleagues compared 7-to-9 month-old babies with adults. They
measured how loudly you had to play two different types of sounds
before the two groups could hear them. The first sound was a tone
something like a dial tone, which has a very narrow frequency;
the second was a sound like static that contained lots of frequencies.
Compared with
the adults, the babies needed louder levels of both types of sounds
before they could hear them. But they were relatively better at
hearing the static-like noises than the tones, and that difference
was significant.
It suggests,
Werner says, that the problem is not in hearing but in attending
to more specific sounds. For example, the difference between "ba"
and "pa" is that one consonant is voiced (the vocal cords are
used) and the other unvoiced (no vocal cord involvement). Adults
can focus on the crucial difference; babies can't.
Babies are
so busy listening to all the sounds in the syllables that
they can't attend well to what matters, she says. They simply
haven't learned what matters and how to focus on it. "By being
selective in what they listen to, adults increase their capacity
to understand," Werner says.
What this
means practically is that other noises are very distracting to
babies; all noises register the same. "If you actually watch moms,
they'll tend to talk a little louder. It's as if they know babies
need a little more," Werner says. Similarly, some moms repeat
their words to babies or lean down to look the babies in the eyes
as they talk, encouraging focus. "It's natural that we do that."
In the actual
experiment, children and adults had to respond when they heard
a tone or a noise. The kids' response was rewarded with toys lighting
up or otherwise being activated; adults simply motioned to indicate
they had heard a sound.
Outside monitors
who couldn't hear the tones or noises watched for signs that a
baby had heard the sound; usually the baby turned his head in
the direction of the noise. In this way, researchers could measure
how loudly a tone or noise had to be played before a baby or adult
could hear it.
In one set
of experiments, the sounds were played with background noise.
There was a 10-decibel gap between when the adults and children
heard the tone and a 5-decibel gap between when the adults and
children heard the noise. In the second set, the sounds were played
in quiet. Here there was a 14-decibel gap between the two groups
when the tone was played and a 7-decibel gap when the tone was
played. For a yardstick, the sound of rustling leaves is 20 decibels.
What To
Do
If you're
interested in learning more about how babies hear and acquire
language, try
Kids Ears. For everything you ever wanted to know about acoustics,
including how the ear actually works, click
here or take a look at this site that explains everything
about decibels.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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