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Journal ArticleDOI

The Sound Environment of the Foetal Sheep

TLDR
The foetal lamb's sound environment consists of intermittent low frequency sounds associated largely with the ewe's feeding and digestive processes and sounds such as vocalisations from the flock, human voices and other sounds from outside the mother.
Abstract
The sound environment of the foetal lamb was recorded using a hydrophone implanted a few weeks before term in a small number of pregnant ewes. It was implanted inside the amniotic sac and sutured loosely to the foetal neck, to move with the foetus. Results differ from those reported earlier for the human foetus: sounds from the maternal cardiovascular system were picked up only rarely, at very low frequencies and at sound pressures around, or below, the human auditory threshold. Other sounds from within the mother occurred intermittently and rose to a high sound pressure only at frequencies above about 300 Hz. Sounds from outside the mother were picked up by the implanted hydrophone when the external sound level rose above 65-70 dB SPL, and the attenuation in sound pressure was rarely more than 30 dB and, especially at low frequencies, usually much less. However, attenuation due to the transmission of sound through the body wall and other tissues tended to change from time to time. It is concluded that the foetal lamb's sound environment consists of (1) intermittent low frequency sounds associated largely with the ewe's feeding and digestive processes and (2) sounds such as vocalisations from the flock, human voices and other sounds from outside the mother.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Sensory stimuli associated with gestation and parturition evoke cardiac and behavioral responses in fetal rats

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that fetal offspring can detect and respond to the classes and levels of biological stimuli that are normally associated with maternal behavior and physiology during perinatal life.
Journal ArticleDOI

A description of externally recorded womb sounds in human subjects during gestation.

TL;DR: High-fidelity intra-abdominal or womb sounds during pregnancy can be recorded non-invasively and may be utilized to determine whether sounds influence preterm infant development in the NICU.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deoxyglucose demonstration of in-utero hearing in the guinea pig foetus.

TL;DR: 2-Deoxyglucose (2-[14C]DG) autoradiography was used to demonstrate central auditory function in the foetal guinea pig in-utero and isofrequency bands of elevated metabolic activity were observed in the inferior colliculus of the majority of foetuses within the last 10 days of gestation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recommended permissible noise criteria for occupied, newly constructed or renovated hospital nurseries.

TL;DR: The permissible noise criteria will protect sleep, support stable vital signs, and improve speech intelligibility for many infants most of the time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Noise induced hearing loss in fetal sheep.

TL;DR: Results show that exogenous sounds can penetrate the uterus and result in alterations of the fetal ABR.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The fetal sound environment of sheep.

TL;DR: Hydrophones implanted inside the intact amniotic sac recorded sounds available to fetal lambs that were similar to normal conversation from outside the ewe and picked up without masking by maternal cardiovascular sounds.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sound transmission to the human foetus through the maternal abdominal wall.

TL;DR: In this paper, sound transmission to the human foetus through the Maternal Abdominal Wall was studied and sound transmission was found to be beneficial for human foetal development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Postnatal effects of prenatal sound stimulation in the guinea pig.

Margaret A. Vince
- 01 Aug 1979 - 
TL;DR: Pregnant guinea pigs were stimulated with a natural sound alien to their species and postnatally the response of their young to this sound was compared with that of unstimulated controls, suggesting that the Response of prenatally stimulated animals had waned before birth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fetal responses to acoustic stimuli.

TL;DR: Attempts were made to develop a relatively simple method of prenatal tests of hearing, and 134 fetuses of the 6th–10th month period of pregnancy were examined by means of this method, and one hundred and twenty-four of134 fetuses responded to the stimulating tones, while the remaining 10 showed no responses.
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