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Two
Languages Better
Than One to Keep Mind Young
Two languages are better than one when it comes to keeping the
brain young, Canadian researchers reported.
Older adults who grew up bilingual
had quicker minds when tested than people who spoke only one language,
the researchers found. They showed less of the natural decline
associated with aging.
The tests of people who grew up
speaking English and either Tamil or French suggested that having
to juggle two languages keeps the brain elastic and may help prevent
some of the mental slowing caused by age, the researchers said.
Writing in the journal Psychology
and Aging, Ellen Bialystok of York University in Canada and colleagues
said they tested 104 monolingual and bilingual middle-aged adults
aged 30 to 59 and 50 older adults aged 60 to 88.
They used a test called the Simon
Task, which measures reaction time for cognitive tasks, such as
recognizing on which part of a computer screen a colored square
appears.
Both younger and older bilinguals
were faster on the test, Bialystok reported.
"We compared groups of people who,
as far as we could tell, are exactly the same," Bialystok said
in a telephone interview.
"They have all had the same amount
of education. They all scored exactly the same on cognitive tests.
They all perform the same on memory tests. And they also score
the same on tests in English vocabulary."
The difference was that half the
people grew up with either French or Tamil spoken at home and
English outside. They all spoke both languages every day from
childhood.
People who were proficient in a
second language acquired in school were not included in the study
to keep the effects clear.
"It's not a facility. It's not
a talent," Bialystok said. Rather it was a case of being forced
from a young age to function in two languages.
Bialystok said her earlier study
with children suggested these circumstances force a change in
the way the brain processes information.
"In the monolingual group the differences
between the younger adults and the older adults were in line with
(the decline seen) in previous research," Bialystok said.
"In the older bilingual they slowed
down significantly less, dramatically less."
Bialystok has not tested people
who acquired languages later in life but believes learning new
languages can only be good for the brain.
"Language is always good -- more
language is always better," she said.
Reference
Source 89
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