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The Prenatal Institute
Brent Logan has devoted much of his life to the study of fetal enrichment, and is a principle theorist for prenatal stimulation. He is the director of the Prenatal Institute in Seattle, through which he has pioneered an enormous amount of research into prenatal stimulation. He is considered one of the most world-renowned experts in this field. In 1995 he invented the BabyPlus system, based on more than 20 years of research into prenatal stimulation. His book, Learning Before Birth, Every Child Deserves Giftedness, aims to help parents understand how fetal enrichment is achieved using the BabyPlus system. The idea for BabyPlus was based on the 1960s work of Lee Salk, an American psychologist who had noticed that both right-handed and left-handed mothers instinctively held their babies on their left side, where the heartbeat is strongest. Further studies would go on to link prenatal stimulation with improved learning skills in babies after birth. Logan says that BabyPlus produces a complex pattern of sounds to stimulate your baby's brain cells and therefore increase his intellect. He has dubbed the program "the Cardiac Curriculum," and says that the more than 100,000 babies born worldwide after the program was used during pregnancy are born calmer, not crying, and stronger both physically and intellectually.
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