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SCIENCE IN THE NEWS - March 12, 2002: Babies and
Intelligence
By George Grow
VOICE ONE:
This is Sarah Long.
VOICE TWO:
And this is Bob Doughty with SCIENCE IN THE
NEWS, a VOA Special English program about recent developments in science.
Today, we discuss recent findings about how intelligence develops in
babies.
((THEME))
VOICE ONE:
Not long ago, many people believed that babies
only wanted food and to be kept warm and dry. Some people thought babies
were not able to learn things until they were five or six months old.
Yet doctors in the United States say babies
begin learning on their first day of life. The National Institute of
Child Health and Development is an American government agency. Its goal
is to discover which experiences can influence healthy development in
humans.
Research scientists at the institute note that
babies are strongly influenced by their environment. They say a baby
will smile if her mother does something the baby likes. A baby learns
to get the best care possible by smiling to please her mother or other
caregiver. This is how babies learn to connect and communicate with
other humans.
VOICE TWO:
The American researchers say this ability to
learn exists in a baby even before birth. They say newborn babies can
recognize and understand sounds they heard while they were still developing
inside their mothers.
One study shows that babies can learn before
they are born. The researchers placed a tape recorder on the stomach
of a pregnant woman. Then, they played a recording of a short story.
On the day the baby was born, the researchers
tested to find out if he knew the sounds of the story repeated while
inside his mother. They did this by placing a device in the mouth of
the newborn baby.
The baby would hear the story if he moved his
mouth one way. If the baby moved his mouth the other way, he would hear
a different story. The researchers say the baby clearly liked the story
he heard before he was born. They say the baby would move his mouth
so he could hear the story again and again.
VOICE ONE:
Researchers in Finland have shown that babies
can learn while they are asleep. They demonstrated that newborn babies
can learn to identify different spoken sounds while sleeping.
The Finnish researchers divided forty-five newborns
into three groups. They used devices to measures the babies' brain activity.
The researchers played recordings of spoken sounds for up to one hour
while the babies slept
After this brief period, the researchers continued
to play the recording to one group of babies during the night. The second
group heard a different recording. The third group did not hear any
recording. The researchers studied each baby's brain activity. Those
in the first group could identify the sounds in the morning and again
at night. The other babies could not.
The head of the study believes that babies can
learn while asleep because the part of their brains called the cerebral
cortex remains active at night. The cortex is very important for learning.
This part of the brain is not active in adults while they sleep.
((MUSIC BRIDGE))
VOICE TWO:
Many experts say the first years of a child's
life are important for all later development. An American study shows
how mothers can strongly influence social development and language skills
in their children.
The study involved more than one-thousand-two-hundred
mothers and children. Researchers studied the children from the age
of one month to three years. They observed the mothers playing with
their children four times during this period.
VOICE ONE:
The researchers attempted to measure the sensitivity
of the mothers. The women were considered sensitive if they supported
their children's activities and did not interfere unnecessarily. They
tested the children for thinking and language development when they
were three years old. Also, the researchers observed the women for signs
of the mental condition called depression.
The children of depressed women did not do as
well on tests as the children of women who did not suffer from depression.
The children of depressed women did poorly on tests of language skills
and understanding what they hear.
These children also were less cooperative and
had more problems dealing with other people. The researchers noted that
the sensitivity of the mothers was important to the general health of
their children. Children did better when their mothers were caring,
even when the women suffered from depression.
((MUSIC BRIDGE))
VOICE TWO:
Another study suggests that babies who are bigger
at birth generally are more intelligent later in life. It found that
the intelligence of a child at seven years of age is directly linked
to his or her weight at birth. Study organizers say this is probably
because heavier babies received more nutrition during important periods
of brain development before they were born.
The study involved almost three-thousand-five-hundred
children. Researchers in New York City used traditional tests to measure
intelligence. Brothers and sisters were tested so that the effects of
birth weight alone could be separated from the effects of diet or other
considerations.
The researchers found that children with higher
birth weights generally did better on the intelligence tests. Also,
the link between birth weight and intelligence later in life was stronger
for boys than for girls.
VOICE ONE:
Another American study examined the development
of very low birth weight babies. They were born early, before the end
of the normal nine-month development period.
Researchers in Cleveland, Ohio studied two-hundred-forty-two
people who were born in the late Nineteen-Seventies. At birth, they
weighed an average of one-thousand-one-hundred-seventy-nine grams. On
average, they were born during the twenty-ninth week of pregnancy. By
comparison, a pregnancy is considered full term at thirty-seven weeks.
VOICE TWO:
The researchers compared the progress of those
born early with other children over a twenty-year period. They found
that the young people who had been very low birth weight babies were
less likely to complete high school. They also did not perform as well
on intelligence tests as other adults.
However, the very low birth weight adults were
less likely to use drugs or alcoholic drinks. They also were less likely
to become pregnant before the age of twenty.
((MUSIC BRIDGE))
VOICE ONE:
A long-term American study shows the importance
of early education for poor children. The study is known as the Abecedarian
Project. It involved more than one-hundred young children from poor
families in North Carolina.
Half of the children attended an all-day program
at a high-quality childcare center. The center offered educational,
health and social programs. Children took part in games and activities
to increase their thinking and language skills and social and emotional
development.
The children attended the program from when
they were a few weeks old until the age of five years. The other group
of children did not attend the childcare center. After the age of five,
both groups attended public school.
VOICE TWO:
Researchers compared the two groups of children.
When they were babies, both groups had similar results in tests for
mental and physical skills. However, from the age of eighteen months,
the children in the educational child care program did much better in
tests.
The researchers tested the children again when
they were twelve and fifteen years old. The tests found that the children
who had been in the childcare center continued to have higher average
test results. These children did much better on tests of reading and
mathematics.
VOICE ONE:
Recently, organizers of the Abecedarian Project
completed another examination of the students who are now twenty-one
years old. They were tested for thinking and educational ability, employment,
parenting and social skills.
The researchers found that the young adults
who had the early education still did better in reading and mathematics
tests. They were more than two times as likely to be attending college
or to have graduated from college.
The study is more evidence that learning during
the first months and years of life is important for all later development.
((THEME))
VOICE TWO:
This VOA Special English program, SCIENCE IN
THE NEWS, was written by George Grow. It was produced by Cynthia Kirk.
This is Bob Doughty.
VOICE ONE:
And this is Sarah Long. Join us again next week
for more news about science in Special English on the Voice of America.
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