Abstract

BackgroundHuman hearing develops progressively during the last trimester of gestation. Near-term fetuses can discriminate acoustic features, such as frequencies and spectra, and process complex auditory streams. Fetal and neonatal studies show that they can remember frequently recurring sounds. However, existing data can only show retention intervals up to several days after birth.Methodology/Principal FindingsHere we show that auditory memories can last at least six weeks. Experimental fetuses were given precisely controlled exposure to a descending piano melody twice daily during the 35th, 36th, and 37th weeks of gestation. Six weeks later we assessed the cardiac responses of 25 exposed infants and 25 naive control infants, while in quiet sleep, to the descending melody and to an ascending control piano melody. The melodies had precisely inverse contours, but similar spectra, identical duration, tempo and rhythm, thus, almost identical amplitude envelopes. All infants displayed a significant heart rate change. In exposed infants, the descending melody evoked a cardiac deceleration that was twice larger than the decelerations elicited by the ascending melody and by both melodies in control infants.Conclusions/SignificanceThus, 3-weeks of prenatal exposure to a specific melodic contour affects infants ‘auditory processing’ or perception, i.e., impacts the autonomic nervous system at least six weeks later, when infants are 1-month old. Our results extend the retention interval over which a prenatally acquired memory of a specific sound stream can be observed from 3–4 days to six weeks. The long-term memory for the descending melody is interpreted in terms of enduring neurophysiological tuning and its significance for the developmental psychobiology of attention and perception, including early speech perception, is discussed.

Highlights

  • Human hearing develops progressively during the last trimester of gestation

  • This review indicates that prenatal memory is present very early, from about 30 weeks Gestational Age (GA), and that near-term fetuses register some of the spectral and temporal features of recurrent complex stimuli, e.g., prosody, melodic contour of speech, language and music

  • The introductory review showed that memory for sounds repeatedly experienced before birth has been observed up to threefour days after birth

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Summary

Introduction

By 35weeks Gestational Age (GA), cochlear biomechanics and frequency selectivity are mature and absolute auditory thresholds are about 10 dB Hearing Level in the premature infant [e.g., 1–4]. Near-term characteristics of fetal cardiac responses to airborne sounds demonstrate that fetuses can discriminate intensity, frequency and spectra [5,6,7,8,9,10,11] and can process some fast and slow amplitude temporal variations in auditory streams [12,13,14]; see [13,15] for extended reviews. Learning studies (see below) indicate that fetuses can perceive temporal variations in the spectra and in amplitude of complex auditory streams such as speech sequences. Near-term fetuses can discriminate acoustic features, such as frequencies and spectra, and process complex auditory streams. Existing data can only show retention intervals up to several days after birth

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