Brain Sides and New Language Learning | Science

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What happens in the brain when you learn a language?
Scans and neuroscience are helping scientists understand what happens to the brain when you learn a second language.

A study of adults learning a new language found that speaking primarily activated regions in the left side of the brain, but reading and listening comprehension were much more variable
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I recommend learning new words in your native language first. I’ve been learning a many new words in the past week (I’ll try not to use them here) and my mind feels like it’s stretching. I think faster and clearer. I can tell new connection are taking place. You understand more because you gain a new way of describing what your experiences. It allows you to not only interpret the superficial but the more complex. It’s not easy but if you can endure for a solid two weeks, everyday, you’ll feel the difference. Practice the same words and sprinkle in nee words as you go. Truly challenge yourself.

mauriciogonzalez
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With having extreme adhd at 25 and never learning languages, learning a more difficult one (Japanese) I had headaches within the first week, information overloaded lol now I’m understanding more words, even surprised my brother with a full sentence

jcsuarezjc
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I am Indian i read English books did grammer for 17 years straight and i can now make sentences can speak even the advanced level i had just repeating the boring structure and words 1000 of time now its in my brain stuck its like obbession in india to learn English so all thanks to britishers ruler who were really brutal but still we learned a language from them now because of this we can talk non hindi speakers easily can make easy life writing and reading is annoying very much u can just get bored of it in a minutes English gives only sleepless night and sleepy days but it all worth doing that much hardwork allahmdullilha

sarahkalonji
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I would like to know if there's a special area in the brain that activates when we are learning a new writing system, for example: Japanese, Chinese, Arabic, Korean etc.

nanimokun
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So, is there something wrong/different in my left hemisphere? I cannot pay (very expensive) for a MRI just because I am curious to know. But I have a tendency to articulate ANY foreign language with no accent at all.
I also learn new languages well, and it is one of my favorite things. But I discovered, that even words from languages that I haven't learned yet are easy for me to pronounce, any accent is easy.
Is there any specialist I can turn to?
And can this happen after TBI accident? I hit my head on a hard rock when I was a little kid, but I don't believe this could be the reason.
Finally, I would like to share my opinion on learning languages. Do not think of the new language as a "foreign" language. It is not "foreign" to you, just because you don't know it yet. People speak the same (or similar) language from different countries. Like some people from Canada speak French, but French is not "foreign" to them, just because France is a foreign country for Canadians, right?
The same thing applies when you learn new words from your native tongue. You just learn new words.

stoyanfourn
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Para mi, es la opuesta. Puedo hablar en español pero no puedo entender cuando un nativo habla

JacobJ
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I would suggest recording the scientist better next time, it was so painful to listen her talking

reginaalegre