Many bilingual individuals say they feel like a different person
depending on which language they are speaking. A new study lends
credence to their claims.



Nairan Ramirez-Esparza, a psychology doctoral student at the university
of Texas at Austin, charted the personality traits of 225
Spanish/English bilingual subjects in both the U.S. and Mexico as they
responded to quistions presented in each language. Ramirez-Esparza and
her colleagues found three significant differences: when using English,
the bilinguals were more extraverted, agreeable and conscientious than
when using Spanish.

Researchers have shown before that bicultural individuals can assume
different roles depending on environmental cues. But the new results
indicate that character itself can morph. "To show that changes in
personality-albeit modest ones-can be triggered by something as subtle
as the language you're speaking suggests that personality is more
malleable than is widely expected," Ramirez-esparza says. Switching
tongues will not turn a bookworm into a party animal, but the variances
are noticeable nonetheless.



The investigators ruled out differences between translations of the
questions as possible confounding factors, and all subjects were truly
fluent. "The results are significant in that they document the
contextual nature of personality," Says Daniel Heller, a psychology
professor at the University of waterloo in Ontario not involved in the
research. "The U.S. is becoming increasingly bicultural and
bilingual," Ramirez-Esparza point out, " so it is important that
we stars to develop a better understanding of bicultural minds."


Happy Learning,




Yovan P. Putra

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>


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