In freezing Antarctic waters, amid bobbing chunks of floating ice, the hums, pitches and echoes of life in the deep are helping scientists understand the behavior and movements of marine mammals.
Morning Overview on MSN
How we learn speech depends more on hearing sounds than on moving the mouth, a study finds
Babies learning to talk rely on their ears far more than on the movements of their own mouths, according to a body of ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Learning to speak may depend less on your mouth than on how your brain hears sound
Researchers have found that the brain’s ability to hear and evaluate its own speech may matter more for learning new vocal ...
Birds make sounds to communicate, whether to find a potential mate, ward off predators, or just sing for pleasure. But the conditions that contribute to the immense diversity of the sounds they make ...
In the United States, every single national park has its distinctive symphony of natural sounds. “These natural soundscapes deserve our protection. But we are losing them and the health benefits we ...
New Baycrest research reveals that the brain remembers what we see and what we hear in different ways. Visual memories tend ...
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