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Learning languages enhances the brain, scientists believe |
Learning a second language 'boosts' brain-power, scientists
believe.
Researchers from University College London studied the brains of
105 people - 80 of whom were bilingual.
They found learning other languages altered grey matter - the
area of the brain which processes information - in the same way
exercise builds muscles.
People who learned a second language at a younger age were also
more likely to have more advanced grey matter than those who
learned later, the team said.
Scientists already know the brain has the ability to change its
structure as a result of stimulation - an effect known as
plasticity - but this research demonstrates how learning
languages develops it.
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It
means that older learners won't be as fluent as people
who learned earlier in life 
Andrea Mechelli, of University College London |
The team took scans of 25 Britons who did not speak a second
language, 25 people who had learned another European language
before the age of five and 33 bilinguals who had learned a
second language between 10 and 15 years old.
The scans revealed the density of the grey matter in the left
inferior parietal cortex of the brain was greater in bilinguals
than in those without a second language.
The effect was particularly noticeable in the "early"
bilinguals, the findings published in the journal Nature
revealed.
The findings were also replicated in a study of 22 native
Italian speakers who had learned English as a second language
between the ages of two and 34.
Lead researcher Andrea Mechelli, of the Institute of Neurology
at UCL, said the findings explained why younger people find it
easier to learn second languages.
Impact
"It means that older learners won't be as fluent as people who
learned earlier in life.
"They won't be as good as early bilinguals who learned, for
example, before the age of five or before the age of ten."
But Cilt, the national centre for languages, cast doubt on
whether learning languages was easier at a younger age.
A
spokeswoman said: "There are conflicting views about the
comparative impact of language learning in different age groups,
based both on findings and anecdotal evidence."
However, she said it was important to get young people learning
languages in the UK.
Only one in 10 UK workers can speak a foreign language, a recent
survey revealed.
But by 2010 all primary schools will have to provide language
lessons for children.
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