Research shows babies as young as two months old can already categorize what they see, offering fresh insight into early ...
Babies as young as two months old are able to categorize distinct objects in their brains—much earlier than previously ...
At just two months old, babies are already organizing the world in their minds. Brain scans revealed distinct patterns as ...
In her 35 years as a psychologist, NTNU researcher Audrey van der Meer has studied everything from baby swimming to what ...
The research blends advanced brain imaging with artificial intelligence to shed light on how infants process the world around them. Together, these tools offer a clearer picture of what babies may be ...
The neonatal period, which is defined as the first 28 days after birth, is known to be a crucial stage in the development of the human brain. During this stage, the brain is known to grow ...
In A Nutshell Category recognition starts early: Two-month-old infants’ brains already organize objects into meaningful ...
Babies are smarter than we thought, new study shows ...
“It really tells us that infants are interacting with the world in a lot more complex of a way than we might imagine,” said ...
When babies are born, their brains contain billions of neurons. But how those neurons interact — and what they can do as babies grow through childhood into adulthood — is largely shaped by their ...
Before babies say their first word, their brains are already learning language. New research shows how early word ...
Researchers at Stanford University played voice recordings of preemies’ mothers reading stories to them to find out whether it affected how their brains developed. The team observed changes in the ...