18/03/2026
Scientists studying fetal learning have discovered that babies can begin recognizing sounds even before they are born. During the final weeks of pregnancy, a baby’s hearing system becomes developed enough to detect voices, rhythms, and repeated patterns. Because the mother’s voice travels clearly through the womb, researchers have been investigating how repeated exposure to certain sounds may influence a baby’s behavior after birth.
One study found that babies whose mothers read the same nursery rhyme every day during late pregnancy showed noticeable differences in their early sleep patterns. After birth, these infants tended to wake up less frequently during sleep, experienced deeper sleep cycles, and displayed slightly lower heart rates when they heard the familiar rhyme again. These responses suggest that the newborn brain was able to recognize the sound pattern that it had repeatedly heard before birth.
Researchers believe this calming effect occurs because familiarity reduces stress for the newborn. Hearing a known voice pattern or rhythm may trigger relaxation responses in the brain and nervous system, helping babies feel more secure in the unfamiliar environment outside the womb.
While this research does not mean that nursery rhymes alone determine how well a baby sleeps, it highlights the remarkable ability of the developing brain to learn even before birth. Simple activities like reading, talking, or singing during pregnancy may help create early familiarity and bonding that can gently support a newborn’s transition into the world.