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British researchers have found that
babies who hear foreign speech in their first nine months of life find it
easier to pick up languages in school or as adults, according to a local
press report Sunday.(File Photo) Photo
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LONDON,
May 11 (Xinhua) -- British researchers have found that babies who hear foreign
speech in their first nine months of life find it easier to pick up languages in
school or as adults, according to a local press report Sunday.
Psychologists at Bristol University found that the
developing brain undergoes a period of "programming" in infancy which sets up
for life its ability to recognize key sounds in whatever will become its native
language, The Sunday Telegraph reported.
This process helps the brain make sense of speech by
filtering out sounds not used in the native language, but also makes it harder
to recognize unfamiliar sounds from foreign languages, the researchers said,
adding crucially, babies exposed to multiple languages during their first few
months retain the ability to recognize sounds from all the languages they hear.
"When a baby is born, it has the capacity to
distinguish every type of speech sound. Even if the parents are English, the
baby has the capacity to distinguish Greek and Chinese vowel sounds. By six
months an infant can only recognize vowels from its native language, and within
another two or three months the same happens to consonant sounds. So within
around nine to 10 months, a baby's universal language ability is reduced to its
native language," Nina Kazanina, an expert in linguistic psychology at Bristol,
said.
Kazanina explained that this happens because the
brain is trying to make sense of sounds used in speech in the context of the
native language, and so applies a kind of filter to help make it easier to
understand words.
Using techniques that measure the levels and location
of electrical activity in the brain in response to different speech sounds,
Kazanina found that while Irish Gaelic speakers generated two separate states of
activity when listening to hard and soft "k" and "g" sounds, English speakers
only generated a single state of activity to both sounds, as they were unable to
detect the subtle differences.
"While this is useful for the native language, it can
have a rather sad effect when it comes to learning foreign languages. Foreign
sounds are often categorized using the native language filter and can lead to
misperception," she said.
The expert believed this explains why English
speakers struggle to learn French compared with Italian and Spanish speakers,
who have more similar sounds in their native tongues.
But the effect can work in the opposite direction
too, according to Kananina, who said English speakers find it far easier to
pronounce Russian vowels than Russians do English vowels because English has
more vowel sounds, so those who speak it have a broader repertoire.
In a similar way, Japanese and Chinese speakers are
unable to tell the difference between "r" and "l", so get them confused when
speaking English, she said.
According to the report, the British research was
supported by a separate study at the University of Washington which also showed
that speaking different languages to babies in their early lives can be crucial
in helping them learn new languages later in life. In the U.S. study,
researchers found that babies who were spoken to in Chinese for just one hour a
week found it easier to recognize Chinese speech when they were older.