Music is great, and babies love when you sing to them. But does that mean your baby will grow up smarter or hit their milestones faster if you play Mozart for them as they’re growing up? Not really.
Some parents believe playing classical music or reading to baby in utero will make them smart. Is there any truth to this?
NEW YORK (Reuters Life!) - The sounds of Mozart might help slow premature infants' metabolism, potentially helping them to put on needed weight, according to an Israeli study. Most research into the ...
COMMISSION, FIVE ON YOUR MENTAL HEALTH TONIGHT, THE BEST MUSIC FOR YOUR BABY’S BRAIN HERE TO HELP YOU CHOOSE IS DOCTOR ERICA LEE, A PSYCHOLOGIST AT BOSTON CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL. GOOD TO SEE YOU, DOCTOR.
A group of Israeli doctors have plunged into this long-running debate with a small study that found the soothing sounds of the 18th century composer may help premature babies grow faster. Doctors at ...
Playing a Mozart lullaby may help reduce the pain experienced by newborn babies undergoing a heel prick blood test, according to a randomized, blinded clinical trial involving 100 infants published in ...
Listening to Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart might make you feel good, but dont expect his music to make you smarter. Newly published research from the University of Vienna that says that listening to the ...
Fans of the movie "The Sound of Music" know the gardens of Salzburg's Schloss Mirabell (Mirabell Palace) well. Julie Andrews and the Von Trapp children sing and dance their way around a fountain and a ...
I held the small speaker up to my wife Shannon’s perfectly round pregnant belly. We smiled at each other, both a little giddy. I pushed play. Paul McCartney’s voice wafted into the air. We waited.