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posted by takyon on Friday July 17 2015, @08:00PM   Printer-friendly
from the materia-gris dept.

A new study published in the journal Cerebral Cortex suggests people who speak two languages have more gray matter in the executive control region of the brain.

In past decades, much has changed about the understanding of bilingualism. Early on, bilingualism was thought to be a disadvantage because the presence of two vocabularies would lead to delayed language development in children. However, it has since been demonstrated that bilingual individuals perform better, compared with monolinguals, on tasks that require attention, inhibition and short-term memory, collectively termed "executive control."

This "bilingual advantage" is believed to come about because of bilinguals' long-term use and management of two spoken languages. But skepticism still remains about whether these advantages are present, as they are not observed in all studies. Even if the advantage is robust, the mechanism is still being debated.

I find learning more languages makes it easier to acquire new ones because you get better at it, but idiomatic speech and use of metaphor seem to take a real hit.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday July 18 2015, @07:36AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday July 18 2015, @07:36AM (#210711)

    Fere eandem ob causam soleo Latine cum amicis nonnullis fabulari: nam inter Europæos variarum gentium sunt permultæ non solum venustæ sed etiam doctissimæ, quibus cordi sit sermone Romanorum colloqui; neque aliter inter nos ullo commercio fruimur quam Latine, cum raro fiat ut aliam linguam habeamus nobis communem. Hac enim ratione cum Polonis, Theodiscis, Gallis, Hispanis, Russis, Britannis, etiam cum hominibus Coreanis et Mexicanis et Americanis, voluptatem capere colloquendi possum, quæ sine communis atque universali, ut ita dicam, sermonis facultate mihi ignota esset.