Investigation of mothers' elicited infant-directed speech and singing for preterm infants.

IF 3.1 3区 医学 Q1 PEDIATRICS Pediatric Research Pub Date : 2024-10-17 DOI:10.1038/s41390-024-03618-1
Caitlin P Kjeldsen, Mary Lauren Neel, Arnaud Jeanvoine, Nathalie L Maitre
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Abstract

Background: Mother's voice is a salient auditory stimulus commonly experienced during early development; after birth, characteristic acoustic modulations of mothers' infant-directed speech (IDSpeech) and singing (IDSinging) contribute to neurodevelopment. For preterm infants, early separation leads to decreased exposure to mother's voice; the impact on maternal ability to produce IDSpeech/IDSinging and infant perception of mother's voice is unknown.

Methods: Fifty mother/preterm-infant dyads were enrolled in this prospective cohort study. Forty-four mothers recorded Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star in coached adult-directed speech (ADSpeech), IDSpeech, and IDSinging. Between 34.0-36.9w CGA, infants underwent high-density EEG during exposure to their mother's voice recordings. Acoustic features of mothers' voice and infant cortical response were analyzed and correlated.

Results: Acoustic features of recorded maternal ADSpeech, IDSpeech, and IDSinging were significantly different. In 33 infants with EEG, mean fundamental frequency and speech production rate (SPR) variability correlated with infant responses to ADSpeech; SPR and SPR variability correlated with IDSpeech; SPR correlated with IDSinging. Correlations were found at differing scalp locations for speech versus singing.

Conclusion: Mothers of hospitalized preterm infants differentially modulate their voice during coached recorded language; features can then be differentiated by their preterm infants thus presenting opportunities for targeted interventions when parents cannot be present.

Impact: Mothers of preterm infants can record their voice with acoustically quantifiable characteristics of infant-directed singing and speech, even when not at their infant's bedside. Recorded adult- and infant-directed speech stimuli are differentially processed in the brains of hospitalized preterm infants. The ability for mothers to create acoustically-distinct infant-directed speech in the absence of their infant may be driven by coaching to achieve an approximated sense of connection with their infant.

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早产儿母亲诱导婴儿说话和唱歌的调查。
背景:母亲的声音是婴儿早期发育过程中常见的突出听觉刺激;出生后,母亲引导婴儿说话(IDSpeech)和唱歌(IDSinging)的声音调节特征有助于神经发育。对于早产儿来说,早期分离会导致其接触母亲声音的机会减少;而这对母亲发出 IDSpeech/IDSing 的能力以及婴儿对母亲声音的感知的影响尚不清楚:这项前瞻性队列研究共纳入了 50 个母亲/早产儿二元组。44位母亲用成人指导语音(ADSpeech)、IDSpeech和IDSing录制了 "一闪一闪小星星"。在 34.0-36.9w CGA 期间,婴儿在接触母亲的语音录音时接受了高密度脑电图检查。对母亲声音的声学特征和婴儿大脑皮层的反应进行了分析和关联:结果:录制的母亲 ADSpeech、IDSpeech 和 IDSing 的声音特征存在显著差异。在 33 名婴儿的脑电图中,平均基频和语言产生率(SPR)变异性与婴儿对 ADSpeech 的反应相关;SPR 和 SPR 变异性与 IDSpeech 相关;SPR 与 IDSinging 相关。结论:结论:住院早产儿的母亲在指导录制语言时会对自己的声音进行不同程度的调节;早产儿可对这些特征进行区分,从而在父母不在场的情况下进行有针对性的干预:影响:早产儿的母亲即使不在婴儿床边,也能用可量化的声音特征录制婴儿指导的歌唱和语言。在住院早产儿的大脑中,录制的成人和婴儿引导的语言刺激会得到不同的处理。母亲之所以能在婴儿不在身边的情况下创造出声学上有区别的婴儿引导语音,可能是由于她们想获得与婴儿近似的联系感。
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来源期刊
Pediatric Research
Pediatric Research 医学-小儿科
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
5.60%
发文量
473
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Pediatric Research publishes original papers, invited reviews, and commentaries on the etiologies of children''s diseases and disorders of development, extending from molecular biology to epidemiology. Use of model organisms and in vitro techniques relevant to developmental biology and medicine are acceptable, as are translational human studies
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