Our
ability to hear and understand a second language becomes more and more
difficult with age, but the adult brain can be retrained to pick up foreign
sounds more easily again. This finding, reported by Dr Paul Iverson of the UCL
Centre for Human Communication, at the "Plasticity in Speech Perception
2005" workshop - builds on an important new theory that the difficulties
we have with learning languages in later life are not biological and that,
given the right stimulus, the brain can be retrained.
It
is an accepted fact that the younger the child, the easier it is for them to
learn a second language. Children are able to understand words and hear small
sound differences that adults often miss -- making understanding more difficult
for adults. For example, Polish students of English have difficulty
differentiating between vowels such as "pen" and "pan"
while German students must learn to hear a difference between the v in
"vest" and the w in "west".
Scientists
used to believe that the adult brain could not be retrained later in life to
distinguish between these sounds: in other words the brain's plasticity (or
ability to change) was set.
Dr
Iverson shows that adults can retune their brains to hear these differences
again. Scientists now believe that the difficulties are caused by our
experience which teaches us to ignore certain sounds so that we are able to
give our full attention to the sounds that (in our native language) matter most
to understanding a sentence.
Two
studies jointly worked on by Dr Paul Iverson and Dr Valerie Hazan, UCL's
Department of Phonetics and Linguistics, have examined whether it is possible
to retune how the brain processes speech sounds, and hope that their findings
will help make language learning easier for adults. In one study, Japanese
subjects were retrained to hear the difference between r's and l's (something
that Japanese students of English tend to find particularly difficult). The
study tested 63 native Japanese subjects in Japan and London, and had them
complete a 10-session training course. Before and after training, the subjects
were given a number of perceptual tests to evaluate their perception of
acoustic cues. Similar tests were carried out in London on Sinhalese (from Sri
Lanka) and German speakers who had lived in the UK for more than 20 years.In
the Japanese training study, the subjects improved their recognition of l's and
r's by an average of 18%. So, for example, if an individual could identify the
difference between r and l 60% of the time, at the end of training they would
be able to get this correct 78% of the time - supporting the view that the
brain can be retuned.
Talking
at the UCL workshop, which brings together specialists in language, speech and
speech perception, Dr Iverson said: "Adult learning does not appear to
become difficult because of a change in neural plasticity. Rather, we now think
that learning becomes hard because experience with our first language 'warps'
perception. We see things through the lens of our native language and that
'warps' the way we see foreign languages.
"It
is very difficult to undo this learning. That is, we change our perception
during childhood so that it becomes specialized to hear the speech sounds in
our first language. This specialization can conflict with our ability to learn
to distinguish sounds in other languages. Through training, we can essentially
change our 'perceptual warping' to make second-language learning easier. I hope
that this research will lead to new ways of training adults to learn second
languages."
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