Brain regions that respond more strongly to the mother's voice extend beyond auditory areas to include those involved in emotion and reward processing, social functions, detection of what is personally relevant and face recognition.
The strength of connections between the brain regions activated by the voice of a child's own mother predicted that child's social communication abilities, researchers said.
"Many of our social, language and emotional processes are learned by listening to our mom's voice," said Daniel Abrams from Stanford University in the US.
Decades of research have shown that children prefer their mother's voices. In one study, one-day-old babies sucked harder on a pacifier when they heard the sound of their mom's voice, as opposed to the voices of other women, researchers said.
The reason behind this preference had never been defined.
"We wanted to know is it just auditory and voice-selective areas that respond differently, or is it more broad in terms of engagement, emotional reactivity and detection of salient stimuli," said Vinod Menon from Stanford University.
Parents answered a standard questionnaire about their child's ability to interact and relate with others.
Before the brain scans, each child's mother was recorded saying three nonsense word before the brain scans, each child's mother was recorded saying three nonsense words.
"In this age range, where most children have good language skills, we did not want to use words that had meaning because that would have engaged a whole different set of circuitry in the brain," said Menon.
The children's brains were scanned via magnetic resonance imaging while they listened to short clips of the nonsense-word recordings, some produced by their own mother and some by the control mothers, researchers said.
Even from very short clips, less than a second long, the children could identify their own mothers' voices with greater than 97 per cent accuracy, they said.
The findings were published in the journal PNAS.
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