Postnatal Effects of Prenatal Music

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Could a mother’s womb be her unborn child’s first concert hall? This literature review explores the effects of prenatal exposure to music and the effect it may have on postnatal development. In accordance with moral standards, parents should strive to provide the best possible environment for their children. If findings are true, regarding the ability for fetuses to recognize and discern different auditory frequencies in the prenatal environment, then the importance of determining its effect in the prenatal and postnatal world is crucial to ensuring the future generation’s intelligence. Literature findings lead me to conclude that though there are magnitudes of studies performed, there is still much to learn about the effects of prenatal exposure to music.

Postnatal Effects of Prenatal Music

In accordance with moral standards, parents should strive to provide the best possible environment for their children. This includes the precious stage of development during the prenatal period. Obtaining medical care during pregnancy is vital to ensuring the best possible outcome for both mom and baby; however, soon-to-be mothers may elect to participate in additional, nontraditional therapies, with the hopes of improving their unborn child’s life after birth. One interesting theory that has had various research studies conducted, is fetal exposure to music and the effect, if any, that it has on the child’s life and development after birth. So far, there is no credible research that has proven that exposing fetus’ to music during pregnancy is harmful (Lai, 2011).

The human fetus goes through numerous amounts of biological and physiological changes during the prenatal period. Though the fetus’ ears begin to form in the first fe...

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...Perinatal Stress Reduction. Journal of Prenatal and Perinatal Psychology and Health, 12(1), 19-29. Retrieved January 25, 2012, from http://dreamhawk.com/pregnancy-childbirth/music-and-perinatal-stress-reduction/

Shelter, D. J. (1985). Prelude to a Musical Life: Prenatal Music Experiences. Music Educators Journal, 71(7), 26-27. Retrieved January 20, 2012, from National Association for Music Education Web site: http://www.menc.org/resources/view/from-heartbeat-to-steady-beat-music-and-the-unborn-child

Weinberger, N. M. (1999). Lessons of the Music Womb. Musica, 6(1). Retrieved January 18, 2012, from MuSICA Web site: http://www.musica.uci.edu/mrn/V6I1W99.html#womb

Wilkin, P. E. (1993). Prenatal and Postnatal Responses to Music and Sound Stimuli: A clinical report. In T. Blum (Ed.), Prenatal perception, learning, and bonding (pp. 307-29). Berlin: Leonardo Publishers.

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