By Madeleine Fitzpatrick
Your baby is born with most of the brain cells she will ever have,
but during her first 12 months in the world, her brain will become
increasingly complex. By the time she reaches the age of two, her
brain will already be 75 percent of its adult weight. By the age of
three, it will have reached 90 percent of its adult weight.
Almost 50 percent of the brain cells your baby is born with will
wither and die during the first few years of life. This process,
known as neural pruning, organizes the brain and makes it more
efficient. The brain learns through experience. Events in your
baby's life trigger electrical impulses to the brain, establishing
neural pathways. The more a pathway is used, the more established
it becomes, making it less susceptible to pruning. Just like a
muscle, the brain works on the principle of "use it or lose
it."
How your baby's brain develops
Humans are the only animals whose brains triple in size during the
first two years of life. If it were any larger at birth, a baby's
head would not fit through its mother's pelvis. Any smaller, and
the baby's survival would be in jeopardy. So how does the brain
grow to 75 percent of its adult size by the age of two, and 90
percent by the age of three?
* When your baby is born his brain weighs about 350 g (12 oz); by
his first birthday it weighs 1 kg (2.2 lb).
* At birth, the brain already has some 200 billion neurons (nerve
cells) - about the same number as it will have in adulthood.
* Each neuron responds to stimulation by growing a network of
dendrites (branches) and synapses (connections) between itself and
its neighbors.
* Each neuron ends up with dendrites leading to an average of
15,000 synapses.
* Dendrite formation becomes more complex over time, with third-
and fourth-tier branches appearing by 6 months of age.
* The more stimulation the brain receives, the more sophisticated
its dendritic networks become.
* The frontal lobe (the part of the brain that deals with emotions)
becomes highly metabolically active from 6 months of age. By 18
months the neural foundations of your baby's emotional intelligence
are laid.
* Between 2 and 4 months of age, the number of synapses in your
baby's visual cortex increases tenfold to 20,000 per neuron.
* By 12 months of age, neurons that distinguish native language
have found their permanent position in the brain.
* At 18 months the language center of the brain experiences a
massive synaptic spurt, producing an explosion in grammar.
What does this mean for your baby?
During the first eight years of life, and in particular the first
three, there are a number of critical windows for acquiring
specific types of intelligence. Once these windows have closed,
learning is much more difficult, if not impossible. Babies are
particularly open to learning during their first year, as outside
of the brainstem (which controls critical life-sustaining
processes), very few neural pathways have been formed.
Your baby's emotions
The part of the brain responsible for processing emotions is one of
the first to develop after birth. For the first few weeks, your
baby's emotional state will be fairly black-and-white - she'll
either be happy or unhappy. By 3 months, experience will have made
her emotions more nuanced. As the frontal lobe of her brain grows
from 6 months, your baby will begin to show a variety of emotional
and social responses.
* Expression: Your baby will begin to make sense of his feelings in
relation to his surroundings. Instead of simply crying, he may find
another way to get your attention and so communicate his
feelings.
* Inhibition: Your baby will start to be able to think twice about
her behavior. For example, she may come to the realization that
there is no point in crying every time you put her down to
sleep.
* Stranger anxiety: Towards the end of the first year your baby may
begin to show a fear of strangers. As the frontal lobe of the brain
continues to develop, your baby's experiences through the anxiety
stage influence his social abilities in later life, helping to
determine whether he is a shy or outgoing person. Frequent and
positive social interactions cause synapses to fire in ways that
help to hardwire the brain's emotional and social intelligence.
Your baby's senses
During the first 12 months, your baby grows from being aware only
of herself, to being able to appreciate and enjoy her surroundings.
His five senses also develop rapidly.
* Hearing: At birth your baby will recognize his mother's voice -
and possibly his father's. He will be startled by loud noises. By 3
months he'll respond to familiar voices even if he can't see the
person speaking. By 6 months he'll recognize the vowel sounds,
tone, pitch and lilt of his native language.
* Sight: At birth your baby can focus on objects 15-20 cm (6-8 in)
away. At this age, the retina's rods (cells responsible for
detecting black and white) are more developed than its cones (cells
responsible for detecting color). Between 2 and 4 months your
baby's vision improves a great deal, enabling her to follow moving
objects and look towards sounds. She can also distinguish color, as
her retinal cones have been activated. By 5 months she can judge
how far away things are. At 8 months the number of synapses in the
visual cortex of her brain peaks.
* Taste: Your baby can tell many different flavors from the moment
he is born, but he will only be interested in sweet and umami
tastes initially, which help to relax him, as they are the
component tastes of breast milk. Sour tastes will cause your
newborn baby to purse his lips, while bitter tastes will upset him.
Although he can taste salt, he neither likes nor dislikes it, and
will not show a reaction.
* Smell: Your newborn can discriminate between many different
smells: infants as young as 6 days old have been shown to recognize
their mother's breast odor. However, your baby cannot tell if an
odor is good or bad, even through the first year of life. This
ability does not develop until three years of age.
* Touch: Your baby's sense of touch develops from the top down,
with the strongest sense of touch in her mouth - one of the reasons
that babies explore new objects by putting them in their mouth.
Your newborn can already distinguish different shapes and textures
using her tongue. When using her hands however, it is not until 10
weeks that she can identify shapes, and 6 months that she can
distinguish texture.
Your baby's language skills
Language acquisition is an innate skill - babies' brains are
programmed to learn language. The critical window for speech
development is from birth to age three. Here are some milestones to
look out for:
* By his first birthday your baby can produce most of the vowel
sounds of English, and about half of the consonants.
* Between 12 and 18 months, your baby slowly accrues new vocabulary
items.
* At around 18 months, your baby's vocabulary hits a critical mass
and she acquires one new word every day or two.
* By the time he's six, your baby understands around 13,000
words.
If intelligence is defined as the ability to learn, then babies are
born geniuses. Babies' brains are so plastic (adaptable) that
learning is effortless for them. By providing positive mental
stimulation to your baby, you can help strengthen the neural
pathways that lay the foundation for his cognitive, emotional and
social intelligence into adolescence and even adulthood.
Madeleine is the Managing Editor @ Brillbaby.com
Got a question or concern? Email the Editor, who is currently
teaching her own baby and blogging about it. Visit
http://www.BrillBaby.com/blog
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