Some theorists believe infants enter the world with "hard-wired"
neurons that are preadapted for both understanding and producing speech.
Others believe that speech is learned through experience. Now research
reveals how a baby's speech centers function at five days old, then
six months, then a year.



Neuroscientist Patricia Kuhl <http://ilabs.washington.edu/kuhl/>   of
the University of Washington <http://www.washington.edu>  , working with
colleagues at the University of Helsinki in Finland, used a new
technique, magnetoencephalography (MEG), to measure brain activity by
sensing the magnetic fields neurons create when they fire. The results
lend empirical evidence to the notion that speech is indeed learned.



"When we played three kinds of sounds-pure tones, a three-tone
harmonic and the Finnish speech sounds PA and BA-for newborns, we saw
activity in their auditory centers," Kuhl says. This means they
heard and could distinguish the sounds. "But there was no activity
in the inferior frontal cortex," where speech production is analyzed
and mouth and throat muscles are prepared for talking.



By six months, however, the infants were activating this region when
they heard either the harmonic or the speech sounds, and the
one-year-olds activated both the auditory and speech-production areas
simultaneously, indicating "cross-talk between the areas that hear
and produce speech," Kuhl says. Babies, she explains, need time to
experiment: to make sounds, listen to them, and link what they hear to
what their speech muscles are doing. Once they have figured out this
process, they can start listening to and mimicking other speakers.



Happy Learning,



Yovan P. Putra

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>



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