What babies can tell us – and why we need to listen
63 Degrees North27 Des 2025

What babies can tell us – and why we need to listen

If you've ever seen an infant lying on its back, you've surely seen them endlessly waving their arms and legs in seemingly haphazard ways. And crying? To the uneducated eye and ear, it does all seem a little... unplanned. But from their earliest moments, infants actually cry in a way that suggests they're already learning the patterns of their mother's language while in the womb! And when you see them waving their arms around? They're actually deliberately trying to figure out what this thing is on the end of their arm, and how can they get it to do what they want?


The way babies move not only tells us loads about healthy infant development, but about whether things might not be quite right, especially when it comes to problems such as cerebral palsy.


Today's guests help us decode the meanings of these movements, why they matter, and what parents in particular need to know to help stimulate their babies' development in the best possible way.


Our first guest, Audrey van der Meer, a professor of neuropsychology, is interested in how an infant makes sense of the world, and how we can encourage that learning to give our children the best start. Our second guest, Lars Adde, has spent his entire career working with infants in neonatal intensive care units, and is pioneering new ways to speed the detection of cerebral palsy as early as possible.


You can read more about Audrey's work at the NuLab here, where you can also see a trailer for a Netflix series on babies in which Audrey is one of the experts for the episode called "Movement". You can also visit this page to see some of the lab's seminal publications.


Lars's collaboration with AI researchers, called DeepInMotion, is featured here. A three-minute video describing his research can be found here.The webpage for his startup, In-Motion Technologies, can be found here.


Here's a link to a transcript of the show.


If you've listened to the very end of this episode, you'll hear that this is the last ever episode of 63 Degrees North! Thanks to all of you listeners, and stay tuned! You never know where I might pop up next.


Questions, comments? Contact me at nancy.bazilchuk@ntnu.no

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Episoder(35)

Cathedral at the end of the world

Cathedral at the end of the world

Nobelmen and women, in fancy clothing and pearls – but with dragon wings and tails. A laughing man with a full head of curly hair. Lions biting the ears off a man whose mouth is full of writhing serpe...

8 Aug 202425min

ENCORE: Hermann Göring's Luftwaffe and the $6 billion deal

ENCORE: Hermann Göring's Luftwaffe and the $6 billion deal

This episode was originally aired on March 16, 2021. Norway doesn't seem like a natural place for the aluminium industry to blossom. But somehow, it did – due in part to the unlikely combination of WW...

25 Jul 202429min

ENCORE: Old bones and modern germs

ENCORE: Old bones and modern germs

This episode originally aired on Feb. 16, 2022.Trondheim, Norway’s first religious and national capital, has a rich history that has been revealed over decades of archaeological excavations. One ques...

26 Jun 202426min

ENCORE: Shedding light on the polar night

ENCORE: Shedding light on the polar night

This episode originally aired on January 27, 2021.Krill eyeballs. The werewolf effect. Diel vertical migration. Arctic marine biologists really talk about these things. There’s a reason for that — whe...

31 Mai 202424min

Strange bedfellows: Howard Hughes, a $2 billion ship and a lost Soviet submarine

Strange bedfellows: Howard Hughes, a $2 billion ship and a lost Soviet submarine

It's 1968 and a Soviet sub carrying nuclear warheads has gone missing – lost, with all hands. The Soviets never found it – but the Americans did – in nearly 5000 meters of water.What follows is the st...

21 Mar 202418min

Seabed mining – savior or scourge?

Seabed mining – savior or scourge?

Norway's Mid-Arctic Ocean Ridge is alive with underwater volcanic activity – where big towers called black smokers spew mineral-laden boiling hot water into the ocean. The minerals precipitate out, an...

6 Feb 202428min

Report from Dubai

Report from Dubai

Our guest on today's show is Anders Hammer Strømman, one of the lead authors for the last Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report on mitigation of climate change, released in April 2022. He w...

13 Des 202312min

When trees talk

When trees talk

In their careful records of climate change over the centuries — and millennia — trees offer a kind of crystal ball on the past. But they can also help researchers figure out everything from what happe...

1 Nov 202329min

Populært innen Vitenskap

fastlegen
tingenes-tilstand
jss
rekommandert
forskningno
sinnsyn
rss-nysgjerrige-norge
liberal-halvtime
tomprat-med-gunnar-tjomlid
rss-paradigmepodden
villmarksliv
fjellsportpodden
kvinnehelsepodden
rss-rekommandert
rss-overskuddsliv
nevropodden
tidlose-historier
rss-bondevennen
psykopoden
nordnorsk-historie