The Evidence Speaks Well of Bilingualism's
Effect on Kids
October 7, 2002
Judy Foreman, LA Times
Kids who grow up in bilingual homes may be slower to speak than other kids, but
once they've learned both languages they appear to have a number of intellectual
advantages. People who speak two languages early in life quickly learn that
names of objects are arbitrary, said Suzanne Flynn, a professor of linguistics
and second-language acquisition at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
"So they deal with a level of abstraction very early."
Also, bilingual kids become exceptionally good at learning to ignore
"misleading information," said Ellen Bialystok, professor of
psychology at
"By age 5, monolingual children can do this," said
Bilingual kids also learn another useful skill--how to switch back and forth
between tasks when the rules (such as the rules of a language) change, said
Adele Diamond, director of the Center for Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience
at the University of Massachusetts Medical School in
Learning to adapt to a new set of rules means learning how to inhibit--or not
pay attention to--a previously learned set, a skill that depends on development
of a particular part of the brain, the prefrontal cortex, which functions in
concert with other areas.
In bilingualism, said Diamond, "you are constantly having to exercise
inhibition because otherwise one language would intrude. We think this puts such
a heavy demand on the system that it pushes the brain to mature earlier."
This ability to filter out distractions and switch back and forth between tasks
may give bilingual kids a leg up in school, she said.
In many studies, researchers use the Stroop test. The child is presented with a
list of colors, but each color's name is written in ink of a different color.
For instance, the word "red" would be written in green ink. Sometimes,
the rule is that the child must say the name of the color and sometimes the
child must say the color of the ink instead. For kids who can't yet read,
Diamond uses pictures of circles on a computer screen.
Diamond then uses functional MRI scans to see which areas of the child's brain
are needed when the rules keep switching. Constant rule switching, she said,
causes the brain to recruit extra neural circuits, whereas tasks that don't
involve rule switching do not.
Large Area of Brain Used
Even in monolingual people, language processing is so central to being human
that the brain devotes a huge amount of "real estate" to it, said
Patricia K. Kuhl, director of the Center for Mind, Brain and Learning at the
University of Washington.
For 99% of right-handed people, the brain processes language mostly in the left
hemisphere. In left-handers, it's often, though not always, reversed.
Specifically, speech production is governed by Broca's area, a small region in
the left inferior frontal cortex of the brain--beneath the temple. Language
comprehension, on the other hand, occurs in Wernicke's area, which lies farther
back. (Sign language, by the way, uses the same areas, as well as visual
processing areas. If a person who communicates by sign language has a stroke in
Broca's area, he may become aphasic--unable to speak--just like a person who
uses oral speech.) Getting the brain up to speed for language processing takes
years. A recent imaging study by Steven Petersen, a cognitive neuroscientist at
When babies are born, they are "citizens of the world," said Kuhl, who
studies language development in babies in the
Using computer-generated vowel sounds and sophisticated statistical analyses of
babies' responses, Kuhl has shown that by 6 months of age, Swedish babies and
American babies "have totally different perceptions of the exact same
sound" from the computer. Other researchers, including those from the
These distinctions become ingrained for life. While Japanese babies learn that
there's no meaningful difference between the sound for "L" and the
sound for "R," American babies learn there is. The result, for
Japanese adults, is that it is very difficult to distinguish between
"L" and "R" because the two sounds, said Kuhl, are in the
same storage "bin."
But mapping exactly where language "bins" reside is a tricky, and
fascinating, business. Neuroscientist Joy Hirsch of
Hirsch's subjects, who spoke a variety of languages--English, Chinese, German,
French, etc.--were shown a picture and were asked to describe it first in one
language, then in the second language. In adults who had learned a second
language early, as toddlers, electrical activity in Broca's area looked
virtually identical, regardless of which language was being used. But when
people had acquired a second language later, the scans showed two separate parts
of Broca's area lighting up.
This suggests that when the learning is early, "the brain treats multiple
languages as one language. But when one learns later in life, the sorting out
seems to be done more spatially," says Hirsch, whose research has been used
by both sides in the bilingual education debate.
At the Montreal Neurological Institute, Denise Klein also finds brain
differences depending on when people learn a second language. Using PET scans,
she has found that people who are fully bilingual in French and English use the
same area of the brain as an "internal dictionary," regardless of
which language they're speaking. By contrast, people who are not truly
bilingual, that is, who learn a second language after childhood, need to recruit
additional brain areas to find words in their nonnative language, suggesting the
brain has to work harder to do this.
Neurosurgeons, too, have documented that multiple languages can be stored in
discrete parts of the brain. Dr. George Ojemann, a professor of neurology at the
University of Washington School of Medicine in
With the patient awake and able to speak, Ojemann shows a picture of, say, a
banana, and asks the patient to name it. By using very precise electrical
stimulation of specific regions in the brain, Ojemann can get the patient to
talk, say, in French but not English, then stimulate a nearby area and get the
opposite result.
Separate Circuits
Though there is some overlap, this suggests that there are "somewhat
separate neuronal circuits for different languages," said Ojemann, who has
recently been able to map different languages to single neurons.
"If you have two languages, all lines of evidence show there is separate
real estate for different languages" in the brain, agrees Patricia Kuhl of
the
So what, if anything, does all this imply for bilingual education? "We are
nowhere near knowing what it implies," she said, though researchers are
trying to find out. Even though the answers are not all in, she added, there
seems to be a "great advantage" to being multilingual.
Judy Foreman is a lecturer on medicine at