The benefits of listening to music as a child

Music in childhood promotes the development of verbal memory and space skills, while in older children it can help prevent dyslexia. Hence, the reasons for stimulating children to listen and practice music are different. Stimulon language compared with other psychomototric activities (visual, theatre) that always [...]
Music in childhood promotes the development of verbal memory and space skills, while in older children it can help prevent dyslexia. Hence, the reasons for stimulating children to listen and practice music are different.
Stimulon language
Compared to other psychomototric (visual, theatre) activities that are increasingly proposed to children under the age of three, access to music results in what primarily helps to develop language skills because it favours memorization and the difference of sounds. This is explained by Alice Mado Proverbio, professor of cognitive neuroscientity at Milan University, who has done some research in the field of music neuroscientity in children: <x0...) Some studies have shown that children who submit to sound incentives give very precise sensitive answers: when there are nine months they know the difference between one baby and another, for example, between yet and elderly. The phenemic capacity is inborn, but sensory stimulus can change the brain because it stimulates the use of specific areas”.
Helping With the Fight Against Dyslexia
Moreover, listening, playing, and approaching music improves verbal and short - term memory and space skills. Moreover, by activating the brain fields used in music, it can be a valid support for the treatment of dyslexia: “Studying music actually changes the ability to read and process sound. The pentagram reading, for example, activates the areas of the brain that are not used by non-musicists: using these areas, those who are dyslexics are deficit or abnormalities in the brain area used for reading”.
Music in the womb? No, thank you.
Researchers ' criticism goes to specially designed devices to enter the vagina for the release of loud melodies. The “is absolutely harmful because the child wakes up, slowing up growth, which happens exactly during periods of deep sleep. So, yes, for music, but the absolutely low volume and, above all, from the belly”.











