Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Life

'Lost' languages get ingrained in brain

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Nov, 2014 11:19 AM
    Traces of the mother tongue that babies learn remain in the brain years later even if they totally stop using the language, as can happen in cases of international adoption, finds research.
     
    The study offers the first neural evidence that traces of the “lost” language remain in the brain.
     
    “The infant brain forms representations of language sounds, but we wanted to see whether the brain maintains these representations later in life even if the person is no longer exposed to the language,” said first author Lara Pierce from McGill University in Canada.
     
    The researchers analysed functional MRI scans of 48 girls between nine and 17-years old.
     
    One group was born and raised unilingual in a French-speaking family. The second group had Chinese-speaking children adopted as infants who later became unilingual French speaking with no conscious recollection of Chinese. The third group were fluently bilingual in Chinese and French.
     
    Scans were taken while the three groups listened to the same Chinese language sounds.
     
    “The brain activation pattern of the adopted Chinese who ‘lost’ or totally discontinued the language matched the one for those who continued speaking Chinese since birth,” Pierce said.
     
    The neural representations supporting this pattern could only have been acquired during the first months of life, Pierce explained.
     
    The study suggests that early-acquired information is not only maintained in the brain, but unconsciously influences brain processing for years, perhaps for life - potentially indicating a special status for information acquired during optimal periods of development. 
     
    The study appeared in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Emotional awareness promotes healthy eating

    Emotional awareness promotes healthy eating
    Learning to pay attention to your emotions could enhance the choices you make with regard to food, thereby helping you lose weight, says a new research....

    Emotional awareness promotes healthy eating

    Big Booty Business: Some Businesses Cash In As More Women Chase Bigger Butts

    Big Booty Business: Some Businesses Cash In As More Women Chase Bigger Butts
    Gym classes that promise a plump posterior are in high demand. A surgery that pumps fat into the buttocks is gaining popularity. And padded panties that give the appearance of a rounder rump are selling out.

    Big Booty Business: Some Businesses Cash In As More Women Chase Bigger Butts

    What Teens Want: Gift Ideas From Electronics To Gift Cards To Gym Clothes

    What Teens Want: Gift Ideas From Electronics To Gift Cards To Gym Clothes
    They are finicky and fickle, and might be updating their wish lists as often as their Instagram accounts. Do you have any idea what to buy the teenagers on your holiday shopping list this year?

    What Teens Want: Gift Ideas From Electronics To Gift Cards To Gym Clothes

    As Fall Heads Towards Winter, It's Time To Think About How Not To Fall

    As Fall Heads Towards Winter, It's Time To Think About How Not To Fall
    TORONTO — Deep in the bowels of a building on Toronto's hospital row, some scientists are taking the fall for you, Canada. In fact, over and over again. The researchers are slipping, flailing, losing their balance. It's all in the hope that someday you won't have to.

    As Fall Heads Towards Winter, It's Time To Think About How Not To Fall

    Had A Rough Year? Think Twice Before Telling The Story In Your Holiday Card

    Had A Rough Year? Think Twice Before Telling The Story In Your Holiday Card
    For many people, the rules for posting personal news on Facebook, Pinterest and other social media are clear: Put a Good Face on Everything. But that rule doesn't always extend to holiday cards.

    Had A Rough Year? Think Twice Before Telling The Story In Your Holiday Card

    Stagnant relationships kill pleasant memories

    Stagnant relationships kill pleasant memories
    While highly committed people remember their relationship history accurately, couples in trouble do not, says new research....

    Stagnant relationships kill pleasant memories