Babies May Pick Up Language Cues In Womb, Cry with an Accent - featured November 12, 2009
< Back to Previous PageThe distinctive sounds of a newborn's first cries may be influenced by the mother tongue of its parents. A new study of over a thousand recorded cries from 30 French newborns and 30 German newborns found differences in the cries' melody patterns. French cries tended to have a rising melody, while the German cries tended to have a falling melody.
Experts in child development say the most exciting part of this discovery is not that infants recognize the melody of their language, but that the newborns may have the ability to use what they heard in the womb to then control their cries.
Read and Listen to this story on National Public Radio
Read and Watch ABC News' Report on this same study
Experts in child development say the most exciting part of this discovery is not that infants recognize the melody of their language, but that the newborns may have the ability to use what they heard in the womb to then control their cries.
Read and Listen to this story on National Public Radio
Read and Watch ABC News' Report on this same study
Tags: News of the Week Newsletter November 2009 SLP Language Newsletter November 2009





