How being bilingual rewires your brain

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[h=1]How being bilingual rewires your brain[/h] This article is published in collaboration with Quartz.

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A woman walks past a display of a brain.
Image: REUTERS/Brian Snyder

Written by
Frida Garza, Editorial Fellow, Quartz

Published
Friday 19 February 2016




It’s well known that being bilingual has cognitive benefits: switching between two languages has been compared to mental gymnastics. But now, research suggests that mastering two languages can fundamentally alter the structure of your brain, rewiring it to work differently than the brains of those who only speak one language.

“Bilinguals are a really a model of cognitive control,” Pennsylvania State University cognitive scientist Judith F. Kroll told Quartz, citing bilinguals’ ability to both hold two languages in their head and expertly switch between them at the right times. Kroll presented her work at the American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting held in Washington, DC last weekend (Feb. 13). If you speak two languages and have ever found this task to be difficult—choosing the “right” tongue based on the context you’re in—it’s because both languages are always “on” in the brains of bilinguals, as Kroll and other cognitive scientists have seen. In other words, the brain is continually processing information in both languages.

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The mental struggle of selecting and switching between two languagesactually helps reshape the brain’s networks, according to Kroll. One study looked at four-month old, eight-month old, and one-year old infants—60 of whom were bilingual and 60 monolingual—and found that, as they grew older, infants who were exposed to both Spanish and Catalan started looking at speakers’ mouths instead of their eyes when listening to someone talk. The monolingual infants, however, only looked at mouths more than eyes when they were listening to someone speak their native tongue.

Kroll told Quartz this study is a great example of how being bilingual can improve speakers’ cognitive abilities. “Babies who are listening to two languages [growing up] become attuned to those two languages right away,” said Kroll. “It’s not confusing them or messing them up developmentally—the opposite is true.”

This rewiring doesn’t happen the same way in every bilingual brain—it’s different for each person, just as each person has their own language experience. But Kroll’s research demonstrates that no matter how effortlessly other bilinguals may seem to switch between their two tongues, there’s a lot going on under the hood. That should come as a small relief for anyone attempting to pick up a new language.


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I am Pancha(5) Lingual..

I speak 4 languages on daily basis at work and also read the 5th language daily.

I guess my brain would be having a short circuit!LOL
 
Last edited:
I am Pancha(5) Lingual..

I speak 4 languages on daily basis at work and also read the 5th language daily.

I guess my brain would be having a short circuit!LOL

Renukaji,

Being multi lingual I guess helps you to focus better..You would be a better decision maker..What is your own assessment?
 
Renukaji,

Being multi lingual I guess helps you to focus better..You would be a better decision maker..What is your own assessment?

When one speaks 4 languages a day at work to different groups of people at times words from different languages do get jumbled up and I have to correct myself.

From my experience I feel my brain usually wants to handle just one language but when I speak so many languages daily I feel my brain tries to create a new language by combining all words from different languages used.

Also speaking too many languages a day I end up stuttering a little cos the brain pauses a while to ask itself which language I should speak now.

I guess its a short circuit!LOL
 
Last edited:
I am Pancha(5) Lingual..

I speak 4 languages on daily basis at work and also read the 5th language daily.

I guess my brain would be having a short circuit!LOL
hi

i can speak abt 10 languages...indian languages/foreign languages....but i dont know much abt my brain....my whole family

speaks 3 languages...
 
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