“Researchers have found that even before infants begin to speak, words play an important role in their cognition. For 3-month-old infants, words influence performance in a cognitive task in a way that goes beyond the influence of other kinds of sounds, including musical tones.
The research by Alissa Ferry, Susan Hespos and Sandra Waxman in the psychology department in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, will appear in the March/April edition of the journal Child Development. In the study, infants who heard words provided evidence of categorization, while infants who heard tone sequences did not.
Three-month-old infants were shown a series of pictures of fish that were paired with words or beeps. Infants in the word group were told, for example, “Look at the toma!” — a made-up word for fish, as they viewed each picture. Other infants heard a series of beeps carefully matched to the labeling phrases for tone and duration. Then infants were shown a picture of a new fish and a dinosaur side-by-side as the researchers measured how long they looked at each picture. If the infants formed the category, they would look longer at one picture than the other.
The results, say the authors, were striking. The researchers found that although infants who heard in the word and tone groups saw exactly the same pictures for exactly the same amount of time, those who heard words formed the category fish; those who heard tones did not.”
Read more at Science Daily.




Dear god that is the most frightening and disturbing picture i have ever seen….
Genuinely the most terrifying picture I’ve ever seen….! I clicked on the tab and actually jumped
There is no need for that picture to exist. No need at all.
Are you trying to give us all a heart attack? It’s not even April fools yet!
Looovely piccie…it’s Rowan atkinsons’ little baby innit?!
But they all had heard words (I may hope) already back home. What if they had heard beeps coming from their parents. Is it learning after birth due to surroundings? Or does it start already in the womb?
It’s not really the words ofcourse, although in our world it is words. And different languages, does that make a difference? Not really I guess, although I’m pretty sure different cultures use “different brain patterns” due to the language they use among other things. Or is it going way back .. is it not just the language but the way they are being built (bodies/mind) … generation after generation ..
Another thought, do we press our psyche inside of them, does their brain respond from the same area as the area the one that spoke to them spoke from. Or opposite area?
And also, shouldn’t they establish a strong self first, a bases, before they start boosting that stuff too much.
I’m not a strong believer of forcing kids too young in their learning mind patterns as described in this study, and well .. there is a tendency in some parents to see the wrong way to their childeren. Not all will read these studies the same way I guess.
The fact that the mind is already capable of all that stuff does not mean that it is recommended to start using it on a not so volutary bases (too much I mean, not really related to this study). They have other stuff to tend to at that age, way more important stuff. Categorizing comes in there quite automatically but in a different way, for way other stuff.
It’s great though .. studying your own child a bit like this.
To agree with what has been said about the picture…
AAAAAAAH!
Yep. Don’t like that photo at all.
Right, so in other words, this article is saying that infants form an understanding of words, before they start to speak.
In other news, man in Vatican who wears white, believed to be Roman Catholic, and bears continue to defecate in gladed areas.
O_o I post only because of the picture also.. that’s sick.
hahaha, what a picture, i jsut laughed out loud at work when i opened this !
Yep, I agree….that is one scary picture!
LC x
lol that pic is hillarious! interesting article as well, love reading these
where’d ya get that picture of rowan atkinson as a baby?
Quite fun. Toma is an northern Italy cheese.