The most compelling evidence for the efficacy of talking to the womb comes from neonatal studies. DeCasper and Fifer’s seminal 1980 study demonstrated that newborns prefer their mother’s voice over a stranger’s, as measured by non-nutritive sucking responses. A follow-up study (DeCasper & Spence, 1986) found that infants exposed to a specific, repeatedly recited passage of text ( The Cat in the Hat ) during the last six weeks of pregnancy subsequently preferred that passage over a novel text.
The Prenatal Bond: Exploring the Effects of Maternal and Paternal Speech on Fetal Neurodevelopment Talking To The Baby In The Womb
The benefits are best understood as rather than exceptional: providing familiar auditory cues that ease the postnatal environment and strengthening the caregiving relationship. The most compelling evidence for the efficacy of
The mechanism is likely reciprocal. Vocalizing to the fetus makes the abstract concept of the baby more concrete, fostering a sense of agency and relationship before birth. In fathers and non-birthing partners, who lack direct physiological feedback, talking to the womb is an especially potent tool for reducing feelings of exclusion during pregnancy. The Prenatal Bond: Exploring the Effects of Maternal
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