Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
These singing mice squeak back and forth—and don't interrupt. Scientists found the brain pathway behind their impressive songs
When it comes to conversation, the closest the animal kingdom gets to human-like abilities may be found in an unassuming ...
Hearing the sound of their mother's voice promotes development of language pathways in a premature baby's brain, according to a new Stanford Medicine-led study. During the study, which is publishing ...
Scientists wanted to know why the chatter of Alston’s singing mice sounds so much like human conversation. What they found ...
Infants born deaf or hard of hearing show adverse changes in how their brains organize and specialize, but exposure to sound and language may help them develop more normally, according to new research ...
Note to reporters: An embargoed video explaining the research is available for preview at https://youtu.be/E5hDhWSmeoY. The mother featured in the video is available ...
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Why learning languages keeps your brain young
What scientists found: A large-scale study of over 86,000 Europeans found multilinguals were up to 2.17 times less likely to show signs of accelerated biological aging. Why it matters: Switching ...
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