Another data point for one of my favourite theories [1].

Udhay

[1] http://groups.yahoo.com/group/silk-list/message/8650

https://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/11/health/views/11klass.html

Once, experts feared that young children exposed to more than one
language would suffer “language confusion,” which might delay their
speech development. Today, parents often are urged to capitalize on that
early knack for acquiring language. Upscale schools market themselves
with promises of deep immersion in Spanish — or Mandarin — for everyone,
starting in kindergarten or even before.

Joyce Hesselberth

Yet while many parents recognize the utility of a second language,
families bringing up children in non-English-speaking households, or
trying to juggle two languages at home, are often desperate for
information. And while the study of bilingual development has refuted
those early fears about confusion and delay, there aren’t many
research-based guidelines about the very early years and the best
strategies for producing a happily bilingual child.

But there is more and more research to draw on, reaching back to infancy
and even to the womb. As the relatively new science of bilingualism
pushes back to the origins of speech and language, scientists are
teasing out the earliest differences between brains exposed to one
language and brains exposed to two.

Researchers have found ways to analyze infant behavior — where babies
turn their gazes, how long they pay attention — to help figure out
infant perceptions of sounds and words and languages, of what is
familiar and what is unfamiliar to them. Now, analyzing the neurologic
activity of babies’ brains as they hear language, and then comparing
those early responses with the words that those children learn as they
get older, is helping explain not just how the early brain listens to
language, but how listening shapes the early brain.

Recently, researchers at the University of Washington used measures of
electrical brain responses to compare so-called monolingual infants,
from homes in which one language was spoken, to bilingual infants
exposed to two languages. Of course, since the subjects of the study,
adorable in their infant-size EEG caps, ranged from 6 months to 12
months of age, they weren’t producing many words in any language.

Still, the researchers found that at 6 months, the monolingual infants
could discriminate between phonetic sounds, whether they were uttered in
the language they were used to hearing or in another language not spoken
in their homes. By 10 to 12 months, however, monolingual babies were no
longer detecting sounds in the second language, only in the language
they usually heard.

The researchers suggested that this represents a process of “neural
commitment,” in which the infant brain wires itself to understand one
language and its sounds.

In contrast, the bilingual infants followed a different developmental
trajectory. At 6 to 9 months, they did not detect differences in
phonetic sounds in either language, but when they were older — 10 to 12
months — they were able to discriminate sounds in both.

“What the study demonstrates is that the variability in bilingual
babies’ experience keeps them open,” said Dr. Patricia Kuhl, co-director
of the Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences at the University of
Washington and one of the authors of the study. “They do not show the
perceptual narrowing as soon as monolingual babies do. It’s another
piece of evidence that what you experience shapes the brain.”

The learning of language — and the effects on the brain of the language
we hear — may begin even earlier than 6 months of age.

Janet Werker, a professor of psychology at the University of British
Columbia, studies how babies perceive language and how that shapes their
learning. Even in the womb, she said, babies are exposed to the rhythms
and sounds of language, and newborns have been shown to prefer languages
rhythmically similar to the one they’ve heard during fetal development.

In one recent study, Dr. Werker and her collaborators showed that babies
born to bilingual mothers not only prefer both of those languages over
others — but are also able to register that the two languages are different.

In addition to this ability to use rhythmic sound to discriminate
between languages, Dr. Werker has studied other strategies that infants
use as they grow, showing how their brains use different kinds of
perception to learn languages, and also to keep them separate.

In a study of older infants shown silent videotapes of adults speaking,
4-month-olds could distinguish different languages visually by watching
mouth and facial motions and responded with interest when the language
changed. By 8 months, though, the monolingual infants were no longer
responding to the difference in languages in these silent movies, while
the bilingual infants continued to be engaged.

“For a baby who’s growing up bilingual, it’s like, ‘Hey, this is
important information,’ ” Dr. Werker said.

Over the past decade, Ellen Bialystok, a distinguished research
professor of psychology at York University in Toronto, has shown that
bilingual children develop crucial skills in addition to their double
vocabularies, learning different ways to solve logic problems or to
handle multitasking, skills that are often considered part of the
brain’s so-called executive function.

These higher-level cognitive abilities are localized to the frontal and
prefrontal cortex in the brain. “Overwhelmingly, children who are
bilingual from early on have precocious development of executive
function,” Dr. Bialystok said.

Dr. Kuhl calls bilingual babies “more cognitively flexible” than
monolingual infants. Her research group is examining infant brains with
an even newer imaging device, magnetoencephalography, or MEG, which
combines an M.R.I. scan with a recording of magnetic field changes as
the brain transmits information.

Dr. Kuhl describes the device as looking like a “hair dryer from Mars,”
and she hopes that it will help explore the question of why babies learn
language from people, but not from screens.

Previous research by her group showed that exposing English-language
infants in Seattle to someone speaking to them in Mandarin helped those
babies preserve the ability to discriminate Chinese language sounds, but
when the same “dose” of Mandarin was delivered by a television program
or an audiotape, the babies learned nothing.

“This special mapping that babies seem to do with language happens in a
social setting,” Dr. Kuhl said. “They need to be face to face,
interacting with other people. The brain is turned on in a unique way.”

-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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