| 查看: 959 | 回复: 4 | |||
| 当前只显示满足指定条件的回帖,点击这里查看本话题的所有回帖 | |||
zyz1981至尊木虫 (文坛精英)
医学物理
|
[交流]
【Pure water】Health Report - Are People Who Speak More Than One Language Smarte
|
||
|
This is the VOA Special English Health Report. In the early nineteen fifties, researchers found that people scored lower on intelligence tests if they spoke more than one language. Research in the sixties found the opposite. So which is it? Researchers presented their newest studies last month at a meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The latest evidence shows that being bilingual does not necessarily make people smarter. But researcher Ellen Bialystock says it probably does make you better at certain skills. ELLEN BIALYSTOCK: "Imagine driving down the highway. There's many things that could capture your attention and you really need to be able to monitor all of them. Why would bilingualism make you any better at that?" And the answer, she says, is that bilingual people are often better at controlling their attention -- a function called the executive control system. ELLEN BIALYSTOCK: "It's quite possibly the most important cognitive system we have because it's where all of your decisions about what to attend to, what to ignore, what to process are made." Ms. Bialystock is a psychology professor at York University in Toronto, Canada. She says the best method to measure the executive control system is called the Stroop Test. A person is shown words in different colors. The person has to ignore the word but say the color. The problem is that the words are all names of colors. ELLEN BIALYSTOCK: "So you would have the word blue written in red, but you have to say red. But blue is so salient, it's just lighting up all these circuits in your brain, and you really want to say blue. So you need a mechanism to override that so that you can say red. That's the executive control system." Her work shows that bilingual people continually practice this function. They have to, because both languages are active in their brain at the same time. They need to suppress one to be able to speak in the other. This mental exercise might help in other ways, too. Researchers say bilingual children are better able to separate a word from its meaning, and more likely to have friends from different cultures. Bilingual adults are often four to five years later than others in developing dementia or Alzheimer's disease. Foreign language study has increased in the United States. But linguist Alison Mackey at Georgetown University points out that English-speaking countries are still far behind the rest of the world. ALISON MACKEY: "In England, like in the United States, bilingualism is seen as something special and unique and something to be commented on and perhaps work towards, whereas in many other parts of the world being bilingual is just seen as a natural part of life." And that's the VOA Special English Health Report, written by Kelly Nuxoll. Tell us about your experience learning languages. Go to voaspecialenglish.com or the VOA Learning English page on Facebook. I'm Steve Ember. |
» 猜你喜欢
本人42,博士刚毕业,现在找不到工作,怎么办?:(
已经有13人回复
博士申请
已经有4人回复
析晶
已经有6人回复
国自然面上和省基金B类撒花
已经有24人回复
26级硕士毕业生求博导收留
已经有6人回复
河北省自然基金
已经有4人回复
交大在职博士(哲学、社会学)
已经有7人回复
有人投过CCC中国控制会议吗?
已经有3人回复
3,4-二羟基苯乙酮如何纯化?
已经有5人回复
国基评审
已经有10人回复
yahuhaha
荣誉版主 (文学泰斗)
A New Beginning
- 应助: 2 (幼儿园)
- 贵宾: 21.067
- 金币: 351654
- 散金: 25031
- 红花: 777
- 沙发: 5561
- 帖子: 190535
- 在线: 3335.2小时
- 虫号: 182418
- 注册: 2006-02-11
- 性别: MM
- 专业: 宇宙化学与比较行星学
- 管辖: 文献求助
4楼2011-03-09 20:42:09












回复此楼