BEIJING, Oct.
16 (Xinhuanet) -- Books and educational toys introduced to children at
very early stage of life may predict the structure of their brains later
in life, a new study finds.
The finding was presented Monday in the Society for Neuroscience's annual conference in New Orleans, the United States.
By
following 64 people for more than 20 years from their age of four,
researchers from University of Pennsylvania find the children who had
access to books and educational toys had better development of their
brains.
The
effect was particularly noticeable in a region called lateral left
temporal cortex, which plays a key role in language and thought.
"The
time we spend with our parents before we are in school is going to
affect us probably for the rest of our lives," said Brian Avants, the
study’s lead author and an assistant professor of radiology at
University of Pennsylvania.
The study also proved the stimulations at age of eight was no longer effective on brain development as it was at age of four.
"These
findings underscore the human brain's sensitivity to its early
environment. They provide powerful evidence that even relatively minor
variations within the normal range of home experience can affect brain
development over a lifetime," he noted.
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