Chinese
'takes more brainpower'
BBC
News (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/3025796.stm)
Mandarin
speakers use both sides of their brain
Speaking
Chinese may take more brainpower than speaking English, a study suggests.
Researchers
in
This
compares to English-language speakers who only need to use one side of their
brain.
The
researchers said the findings could boost understanding of how the brain
processes languages.
This,
in turn, could one day help scientists to develop better ways of helping people
to re-learn languages after a stroke or similar damage to the brain.
Brain
scans
Dr
Sophie Scott and colleagues at the Wellcome Trust
carried out brain scans on a group of Mandarin and English speakers.
They
found that the left temporal lobe, which is located by the left temple, becomes
active when English speakers hear English.
People
who speak different sorts of languages use their brains to decode speech in
different ways ![]()
Dr
Sophie Scott,
Wellcome
Trust
The
researchers believe that this area of the brain links speech sounds together to
form individual words.
They
expected similar findings when they carried out scans on Mandarin speakers.
However,
they found that both their left and right temporal lobes become active when they
hear Mandarin.
"People
who speak different sorts of languages use their brains to decode speech in
different ways," said Dr Scott.
"It
overturned some long-held theories."
Mandarin
is a notoriously difficult language to learn. Unlike English, speakers use
intonation to distinguish between completely different meanings of particular
words.
For
instance, the word "ma" can mean mother, scold, horse or hemp depending on how
it is said.
The
researchers believe that this need to interpret intonation is why Mandarin
speakers need to use both sides of their brain.
The
right temporal lobe is normally associated with being able to process music or
tones.
"We
think that Mandarin speakers interpret intonation and melody in the right
temporal lobe to give the correct meaning to the spoken words," said Dr Scott.
"It
seems that the structure of the language you learn as a child affects how the
structure of your brain develops to decode speech.
"Native
English speakers, for example, find it extraordinarily difficult to learn
Mandarin."
Learning
languages
Dr
Scott said the findings could help scientists to understand how the brain learns
language.
It
could be particularly useful in trying to understand how it re-learns language
after a stroke.
She
suggested it could also lead to new drugs to help people who have lost their
language skills.
"There
is evidence from other studies that certain drugs affect learning in the brain
regions that support hearing and speech," she said.
"This
is something we can improve on."
Dr
William Marslen-Wilson, of the MRC Cognition and Brain
Sciences Unit at
"It
is an interesting finding," he told BBC News Online.
"Looking
at languages that are very different from each other helps us to understand how
the brain processes language.
"It
can also help us to understand language rehabilitation," he said.
"This
field is really opening up but it is very early days."
The
findings will be included in the summer science exhibition at the Royal Society
in