[lg policy] Being Bilingual: Beneficial Workout for the Brain
Harold Schiffman
haroldfs at GMAIL.COM
Mon Feb 21 15:34:53 UTC 2011
Being Bilingual: Beneficial Workout for the Brain
By David L. Wheeler
Speaking two languages confers lifelong cognitive rewards that spread far
beyond the improved ability to communicate, a series of scientific findings
has shown.
In the latest research, described Friday at the American Association for the
Advancement of Science, the onset of the symptoms of Alzheimer's disease was
delayed by more than four years in elderly bilingual adults, even though
they had identical brain damage compared with a group of adults in the study
who spoke only one language. "It's not that being bilingual prevents
Alzheimer's," said Ellen Bialystok, a professor of psychology at York
University, in Toronto. "It's just that you are better able to cope."
Much of the early research on language learning focused on those who spoke
only English. That research has expanded over the last decade to those
speaking more than one language and to more universities outside of the
United States, including Canadian institutions with ready access to
French-English bilingual speakers, and European institutions surrounded by
multilingual populations. The research on bilingualism begins with newborns,
who are studied in part by counting how often they suck pacifiers when they
are listening to languages they were exposed to in utero.
In the later stages of life, researchers have studied how long the elderly
are able to stave off dementia and keep their ability to consciously switch
between languages. The chief benefit of being bilingual is stronger
"executive control," or the ability to shut out irrelevant information and
focus on what is important. Such executive functioning, says Ms. Bialystok,
is the chief building block of higher thought. In one executive-control
test, researchers ask subjects to tell the direction signaled by an arrow
surrounded by distracting shapes. In another such test, subjects say the
color of the ink that they see when they are presented, in rapid fire, the
names of colors. If the word "red" is written out in blue ink, subjects need
the cognitive agility to resist the temptation to say "red" and focus on the
ink's color. Bilingual speakers produce the correct answer more often and
more quickly. Bilingual speakers are also better multitaskers, switching
more rapidly between cognitive tasks.
Benefits of Linguistic Conflict
Research has shown that both languages of bilingual speakers are active when
they are preparing to speak, although they may believe they are thinking in
only one language. "For example, right now I'm trying to speak in English,
but my Spanish is there all the time, activated, and it will compete," said
Teresa Bajo, a professor of experimental psychology at the University of
Granada, in Spain, at a news briefing. That linguistic conflict means that
going from thinking to speaking might take milliseconds longer for bilingual
people. But in the process of navigating the competition between languages,
their executive-control systems are strengthened as they learn to shut down
one language when they speak.
There are some interesting exceptions to this need: Hearing people brought
up in deaf families who speak both American Sign Language and English can
come close to speaking both of their languages simultaneously, although they
do have to choose between the syntax of one. Research on such bilingual
speakers done at San Diego State University found distinct cognitive
benefits: Bilingual ASL-English speakers had improved spatial memory and a
stronger ability to discriminate between faces.
For aging subjects, learning more than one language builds their "cognitive
reserves," the capacity that helps adults maintain their mental skills as
the brain deteriorates. And babies exposed to multiple languages do not get
confused, but quickly learn to distinguish between languages and build a
stronger "perceptual vigilance."
Babies use both their eyes and their ears, looking for visual cues on faces
and listening to the language's rhythms, stresses, and syllables. One study
done at the University of British Columbia and other institutions found that
when 4-month-old babies were shown videos with the sound turned off, they
could discriminate, presumably using facial cues, between those speaking a
language they were learning and those speaking one they had not been exposed
to. (Researchers measured how long the babies appeared to be paying
attention to the videos.)
But this ability to discriminate between languages faded at about 8 months
for babies exposed to only one language: They were losing some perceptual
acuity. "Bilingual babies pay attention to visual information whether it is
specific to their language or not," said Janet F. Werker, director of the
Infant Studies Centre at the University of British Columbia.
Preparation for Language Learning
In a separate session at the AAAS meeting, researchers spoke about how to
make language learning more efficient. "We can ask, What kind of mental
state do you need to bring to the game to make every second count?," said
Amy S. Weinberg, deputy director of the Center for Advanced Study of
Language at the University of Maryland at College Park, who organized the
session. The answers to Ms. Weinberg's question: good perceptual acuity,
strong executive control, and a good "working memory."
Much of the research on language learning has been for the U.S. government,
which wants to improve language training for intelligence analysts,
diplomats, and military officers. "We want to make training faster, better,
and cheaper," says Ms. Weinberg.
The research so far points to exercises that could also be used in
university classrooms to prepare adult students to learn languages:
improving short-term memory by having students memorize long sequences of
letters, and training readers and listeners to seek out and use, when
appropriate, the much-less-common meanings of words, a process known as
"divergent thinking." The help rendered by those exercises seems to expand
to other forms of memory and to other cognitive functions, such as the
ability to interpret ambiguity.
While research has firmly established that children and young adolescents
are the best language learners, adults interested in adding a language
should not despair. In terms of the cognitive improvements, "the more the
better, and every little bit helps," says Ms. Bialystok.
http://chronicle.com/article/Being-Bilingual-Beneficial/126462/?sid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
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Harold F. Schiffman
Professor Emeritus of
Dravidian Linguistics and Culture
Dept. of South Asia Studies
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6305
Phone: (215) 898-7475
Fax: (215) 573-2138
Email: haroldfs at gmail.com
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~haroldfs/
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