Listening to mom in the neonatal intensive care unit: a randomized trial of increased maternal speech exposure on white matter connectivity in infants born preterm
Katherine E. Travis, Melissa Scala, Virginia A. Marchman, Hua Wu, Cory K. Dodson, Lisa Bruckert, Molly F. Lazarus, Rocío Velasco Poblaciones, Kristen W. Yeom, Heidi M. Feldman

TL;DR
This study shows that preterm infants exposed to more maternal speech in the NICU have more mature brain structures linked to language processing.
Contribution
The study provides causal evidence that maternal speech exposure in the NICU affects white matter development in preterm infants.
Findings
Increased maternal speech exposure was linked to lower mean diffusivity in the left arcuate fasciculus of preterm infants.
The T-group showed higher fractional anisotropy and R1 values in the left arcuate, indicating more mature brain microstructure.
These effects were specific to the left hemisphere, not the right arcuate fasciculus.
Abstract
Early speech experiences are presumed to contribute to the development of brain structures involved in processing speech. Previous research has been limited to correlational studies. Here, we conducted a randomized trial with neonates born preterm to determine whether increased exposure to maternal speech during NICU hospitalization is causally linked to structural white matter maturation. We enrolled 46 neonates born preterm (24–31 weeks gestational age). Participants were randomly assigned to receive increased (T: n = 21) or routine (C: n = 25) exposure to mother’s speech. The T-group heard 10-min audio recordings of their mothers reading a children’s story two times/hour between 10pm and 6am, increasing speech exposure by 2.67 h/day. The C-group did not hear recorded speech. At near-term-equivalent age, we obtained two high-angular resolution diffusion MRI (scan 1: b = 700, scan 2:…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfant Development and Preterm Care · Neonatal and fetal brain pathology · Language Development and Disorders
