The age at which children learn a second language can have a significant bearing on the structure of their adult brain, according to a new joint study by the Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital – The Neuro at McGill University and Oxford University. The majority of people in the world learn to speak more than one language during their lifetime. Many do so with great proficiency particularly if the languages are learned simultaneously or from early in development.
The study
concludes that the pattern of brain development is similar if you learn one or
two language from birth. However, learning a second language later on in
childhood after gaining proficiency in the first (native) language does in fact
modify the brain’s structure, specifically the brain’s inferior frontal cortex.
The left inferior frontal cortex became thicker and the right inferior frontal
cortex became thinner. The cortex is a multi-layered mass of neurons that plays
a major role in cognitive functions such as thought, language, consciousness
and memory.
The study
suggests that the task of acquiring a second language after infancy stimulates
new neural growth and connections among neurons in ways seen in acquiring
complex motor skills such as juggling. The study’s authors speculate that the
difficulty that some people have in learning a second language later in life
could be explained at the structural level.
“The
later in childhood that the second language is acquired, the greater are the
changes in the inferior frontal cortex,” said Dr. Denise Klein, researcher in
The Neuro’s Cognitive Neuroscience Unit and a lead author on the paper
published in the journal Brain and Language. “Our results provide structural
evidence that age of acquisition is crucial in laying down the structure for
language learning.”
Using a
software program developed at The Neuro, the study examined MRI scans of 66
bilingual and 22 monolingual men and women living in Montreal. The work was
supported by a grant from the Natural Science and Engineering Research Council
of Canada and from an Oxford McGill Neuroscience Collaboration Pilot project.
The Neuro
The
Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital — The Neuro, is a unique academic
medical centre dedicated to neuroscience. Founded in 1934 by the renowned Dr.
Wilder Penfield, The Neuro is recognized internationally for integrating
research, compassionate patient care and advanced training, all key to advances
in science and medicine. The Neuro is a research and teaching institute of McGill
University and forms the basis for the Neuroscience Mission of the McGill
University Health Centre. Neuro researchers are world leaders in cellular
and molecular neuroscience, brain imaging, cognitive neuroscience and the study
and treatment of epilepsy, multiple sclerosis and neuromuscular disorders. For
more information, visit theneuro.com.
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