Everyone knows that language is a great tool for communication, but
scholars have debated for centuries whether it also plays an important
role in learning. A new study supports this notion by showing that
linguistic information boosts people's ability to sort objects.



A team led Gary Lupyan, then at Carnegie Mellon University
<http://www.cmu.edu> , asked volunteers to categorize 16
"aliens" that appeared on a computer screen as good guys or bad
guys. All the aliens looked different, but half of them shared subtle
features that distinguished them from the other half. Participant heard
either a bell or a buzz to indicate whether their choice was correct or
incorrect. But half of the volunteers received extra information: they
also saw the word "leebish" or "grecious" appear on the
screen, depending on which group the aliens belonged to. Those who
received the linguistic cues learned to tell the difference between
friend and foe much faster even though the nonsense words provided
unnecessary information. And to rule out the idea that any additional
cue might speed up learning, the researchers also tried giving the
subjects nonlingual information about where the aliens lived; this hint
had no effect. The results indicate that the word acted "as a
glue," connecting the objects in each category, says Lupyan, who is
now at Cornell University <http://www.cornell.edu/> .



Related work by Lupyan and others has shown that language also affects
visual processing. For example, when people are asked to rapidly find a
5 among 2s on a computer screen, they are able to pick out the target
number more quickly when they hear the words "find the five"
than when they hear static.



These findings reveal clues about how language might have evolved in our
ancestors, Lupyan says. If language were only good for communication,
then it would have value to users only if it were understood by others
and, therefore, would have had to evolve as a group trait. "But if
language also helps individuals think," he says, then we can
entertain other possibilities about its evolution, because people
didn't actually have to understand each other fully for language to
be a useful trait."

Happy Learning,


Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>
Expand your genius through  Total-Mind Learning  Series coaching 
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