Dr. David Bashwiner
π€ SpeakerVoice Profile Active
This person's voice can be automatically recognized across podcast episodes using AI voice matching.
Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I'm technically still in a minor key.
But if I do...
I can like do certain things to like,
almost like bring out the minorness more.
So in, in, yeah, just doing that with, with,
I would say like, I mean, I would love to get the data that comes from an EEG that's attached to a plant and like to look at what's going on and they have cyclical processes, but I think you could get into what those processes are and you could really, I think you can learn a lot about your plants if you could listen to those rhythms that are going on and figure out how they responding to how much sunlight they have and stuff like that.
I mean, yeah.
So I think it's a great question.
So apparently babies can hear at least in the third trimester.
Music is always good for babies.
One of the main things I think is really important, I feel like it's really, really important for parents to sing with their babies.
And it doesn't matter, not as a performance.
It does not matter what it sounds like.
And it doesn't matter if you don't have any songs.
But just to kind of share in that way, I feel like in our culture, we have this idea about virtuosity.
We associate people who do music as having some special gift.
I think it's...
That, I think, is, like, yeah, I worry about that so much.
I feel like it's really important for everybody to make a little music, to, like, coexist with their baby vocally, and, like, through little rhythmic games and stuff like that.
Those things do really help the nervous system, and they're just, like, special.