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

    YouTube Cooking Shows Help Pet Owners Dish Up Easy, Homemade Alternatives To Commercial Kibble

    YouTube Cooking Shows Help Pet Owners Dish Up Easy, Homemade Alternatives To Commercial Kibble
    No one knows that better than Kris Rotonda and Denise Fernandez, the couple who conceived the Doggy Cooking Network and founded online dating service YouMustLoveDogsDating.com, where pooch-loving singles can connect with potential mates.

    YouTube Cooking Shows Help Pet Owners Dish Up Easy, Homemade Alternatives To Commercial Kibble

    What to discuss when death is near

    What to discuss when death is near
    A study has identified the top five things doctors should discuss with hospitalised patients and their families as they near the end of their lives....

    What to discuss when death is near

    Women have higher risk of injury than men post-drinking

    Women have higher risk of injury than men post-drinking

    Woman who find alcohol hard to resist even after three standard drinks are more likely to suffer ...

    Women have higher risk of injury than men post-drinking

    Find Out! If Your Husband Is Two Timing You?

    Find Out! If Your Husband Is Two Timing You?
    Although husband wife relationship is one such bond which flourish in the soil of trust and loyalty. But if we talk about the ongoing epoch then even infidelity is one of the conspicuous and caustic truths prevailing in present day marital bonds. 

    Find Out! If Your Husband Is Two Timing You?

    Globetrotting Travel Writer Pico Iyer's New Book 'Art Of Stillness' Makes Case For Staying Put

    Globetrotting Travel Writer Pico Iyer's New Book 'Art Of Stillness' Makes Case For Staying Put
    RIO DE JANEIRO — Pico Iyer has spent the past several decades on the move, incessantly hopping from one far-flung destination — Ethiopia, Morocco, Indonesia — to another. But the globetrotting travel writer is now convinced the most exciting place to go is nowhere at all.

    Globetrotting Travel Writer Pico Iyer's New Book 'Art Of Stillness' Makes Case For Staying Put

    Hotels Try To Speed Guests Through Check-in Process; Smartphones Are Being Used As Room Keys

    Hotels Try To Speed Guests Through Check-in Process; Smartphones Are Being Used As Room Keys
    New programs are helping speed up the check-in process for busy travellers, or in at least one case, letting them go straight to their rooms by using their smartphone to unlock doors.

    Hotels Try To Speed Guests Through Check-in Process; Smartphones Are Being Used As Room Keys