Babies learn language from rhythmic information, not phonetic sounds

The Guardian

A study from the University of Cambridge reveals that babies learn language from rhythmic information, not phonetic sounds, challenging previous beliefs. Infants process phonetic information at around seven months, with rhythm being crucial for language development. The research suggests that dyslexia and language disorders may be linked to rhythm perception. The study, published in Nature Communications, recommends talking and singing to babies to improve language outcomes.


With a significance score of 7, this news ranks in the top 1% of today's 29688 analyzed articles.

Get summaries of news with significance over 5.5 (usually ~10 stories per week). Read by 9500 minimalists.