Why Bilinguals Are Smarter

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Why Bilinguals Are Smarter

Postby jdsmith » 25 Mar 2012, 07:15

SPEAKING two languages rather than just one has obvious practical benefits in an increasingly globalized world. But in recent years, scientists have begun to show that the advantages of bilingualism are even more fundamental than being able to converse with a wider range of people. Being bilingual, it turns out, makes you smarter. It can have a profound effect on your brain, improving cognitive skills not related to language and even shielding against dementia in old age.

This view of bilingualism is remarkably different from the understanding of bilingualism through much of the 20th century. Researchers, educators and policy makers long considered a second language to be an interference, cognitively speaking, that hindered a child’s academic and intellectual development.

They were not wrong about the interference: there is ample evidence that in a bilingual’s brain both language systems are active even when he is using only one language, thus creating situations in which one system obstructs the other. But this interference, researchers are finding out, isn’t so much a handicap as a blessing in disguise. It forces the brain to resolve internal conflict, giving the mind a workout that strengthens its cognitive muscles.

Bilinguals, for instance, seem to be more adept than monolinguals at solving certain kinds of mental puzzles. In a 2004 study by the psychologists Ellen Bialystok and Michelle Martin-Rhee, bilingual and monolingual preschoolers were asked to sort blue circles and red squares presented on a computer screen into two digital bins — one marked with a blue square and the other marked with a red circle.

In the first task, the children had to sort the shapes by color, placing blue circles in the bin marked with the blue square and red squares in the bin marked with the red circle. Both groups did this with comparable ease. Next, the children were asked to sort by shape, which was more challenging because it required placing the images in a bin marked with a conflicting color. The bilinguals were quicker at performing this task.

The collective evidence from a number of such studies suggests that the bilingual experience improves the brain’s so-called executive function — a command system that directs the attention processes that we use for planning, solving problems and performing various other mentally demanding tasks. These processes include ignoring distractions to stay focused, switching attention willfully from one thing to another and holding information in mind — like remembering a sequence of directions while driving.

Why does the tussle between two simultaneously active language systems improve these aspects of cognition? Until recently, researchers thought the bilingual advantage stemmed primarily from an ability for inhibition that was honed by the exercise of suppressing one language system: this suppression, it was thought, would help train the bilingual mind to ignore distractions in other contexts. But that explanation increasingly appears to be inadequate, since studies have shown that bilinguals perform better than monolinguals even at tasks that do not require inhibition, like threading a line through an ascending series of numbers scattered randomly on a page.

The key difference between bilinguals and monolinguals may be more basic: a heightened ability to monitor the environment. “Bilinguals have to switch languages quite often — you may talk to your father in one language and to your mother in another language,” says Albert Costa, a researcher at the University of Pompeu Fabra in Spain. “It requires keeping track of changes around you in the same way that we monitor our surroundings when driving.” In a study comparing German-Italian bilinguals with Italian monolinguals on monitoring tasks, Mr. Costa and his colleagues found that the bilingual subjects not only performed better, but they also did so with less activity in parts of the brain involved in monitoring, indicating that they were more efficient at it.

The bilingual experience appears to influence the brain from infancy to old age (and there is reason to believe that it may also apply to those who learn a second language later in life).

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/18/opini ... aZOmnO03qA

Cool. :thumbsup:
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Re: Why Bilinguals Are Smarter

Postby Nuit » 25 Mar 2012, 10:32

Interesting stuff - I've thought that it must be good for my daughter's brain to be managing 2 languages.
I accept the fact now that she's so good at code-switching (the ability to go back and forth between Chinese & English, in back-to-back sentences), but it often blows folks back in the UK away when they hear her doing that.

Although I was talking to friend of the wife's last week, and asked her how good my kid's Chinese actually was. She said that when she's talking in full sentences, then it's fine. But when she code-switched within a sentence (perhaps she'd speak English and then find she wanted to say a word that she only knows in Chinese), that Chinese word isn't so clear. That could be because she's copying me there, I often speak English and then throw a Chinese word into the mix - usually really badly.
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Re: Why Bilinguals Are Smarter

Postby tango42 » 25 Mar 2012, 22:46

There are also a lot of stupid ignorant bilinguals...

Being intelligent is being intelligent.
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Re: Why Bilinguals Are Smarter

Postby jdsmith » 26 Mar 2012, 12:30

tango42 wrote:There are also a lot of stupid ignorant bilinguals...

Being intelligent is being intelligent.

Right. Scientists shouldn't study anything. Either you are or you aren't. :roll:
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Re: Why Bilinguals Are Smarter

Postby elburro » 26 Mar 2012, 12:43

Would be interesting to know if being trilingual then gives even further advantages or maybe that just makes things confusing.
Also, it would be interesting to know if it makes any difference what the two languages are. Would English+French be equivalent to English+Chinese?
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Re: Why Bilinguals Are Smarter

Postby jdsmith » 26 Mar 2012, 12:49

elburro wrote:Would be interesting to know if being trilingual then gives even further advantages or maybe that just makes things confusing.
Also, it would be interesting to know if it makes any difference what the two languages are. Would English+French be equivalent to English+Chinese?

Right, linguistically close languages or ones totally different. It's an interesting field of study for sure. :thumbsup:
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Re: Why Bilinguals Are Smarter

Postby Jaboney » 26 Mar 2012, 13:47

tango42 wrote:There are also a lot of stupid ignorant bilinguals...

Being intelligent is being intelligent.
No. There are many modes of intelligence. For example...
the unusual way that an Australian aboriginal group understands spatial direction: everything is spoken of in terms of the cardinal points on the compass, and the words for “left” and “right” aren’t used at all. These aborigines, amazingly, know at all times which way is north, south, east and west.

A speaker of this language, Mr. Deutscher wrote, might warn you to “look out for that big ant just north of your foot,” or tell you he left something “on the southern edge of the western table.”
...that's an form of spatial intelligence. Doesn't mean a speaker of the language will be better than average working with numbers, written language, or social interaction.

But it's hard to believe that learning the language wouldn't reshape and expand one's mind. Easy to believe that learning a second or third language would build on an individual's native intelligence, leaving them... smarter than they were before. :homer:
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Re: Why Bilinguals Are Smarter

Postby Icon » 26 Mar 2012, 14:17

It does. I have frequently quoted that research that explains how it works, which is basically like duplicating the hard disk capacity of your brain, and creating new, expanded, and plentiful connections between them. In a bilingual's brain, there are more connections, and hence, reasoning can be made faster and along different lines of thought than monolinguals. That is why it was advocated, for instance, that Math or Science be taught in the secondary language, for further enhancement.

Think about the brain as a muscle and getting twice the exercise.

But true, different kinds of "intelligence" was the latest trend in education last time I glimpsed into that field. Dunno what is the "fashionable theory" right now, but that one was pretty hippy to me. :D
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