Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Bilinguals Have An Enhanced Ability To Maintain Attention And Focus

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Sep, 2016 12:10 PM
    A recent study at the University of Birmingham shed light onto the cognitive benefits of bilingualism and shows that bilingual people have an enhanced ability to maintain attention and focus. The results of the study suggest, it is this improved attentional control that provides the ‘bilingual advantage’ rather than a better-than-average inhibitory control.
     
    Bilinguals have been found to possess cognitive advantages over those who only speak one language, but the nature of the advantage is unclear.
     
    While some evidences suggested that bilinguals have developed enhanced inhibitory control abilities, that is, the ability to suppress or tune out stimuli that are irrelevant to the task at hand.
     
    Other evidence suggests that bilinguals possess enhanced attention control abilities and are better able to concentrate on a specific stimulus.
     
    The study recruited 99 participants to complete three well-known psychological tests that measure inhibitory control ability, the Simon task, the Spatial Stroop task and the Flanker task.
     
    48 were highly proficient English-Chinese bilingual, who had learned English before the age of 10 and switch between languages on a daily basis and 51 were English monolingual speakers.
     
    The important measure was the time it took participants to respond to the stimuli presented in the tests on a computer screen.
     
    In the Flanker task, participants were presented with rows of arrows and asked to indicate the direction of the central arrow by pressing a left or right button.
     
    They needed to ignore the flanking arrows which either pointed in the same or different direction as the central arrow.
     
     
     
    In the Spatial Stroop task, participants needed to indicate the direction of a single arrow pointing either left or right, by pressing a button.
     
    Arrows appeared either on the left or the right side of the screen, which helped or hindered the correct response.
     
    The Simon task was very similar to the Spatial Stroop task, but stimuli were single blue or red squares instead of arrows.
     
    The novelty of the study was to examine slow response times separately from the more usual fast responses.
     
    This showed that the two participant groups were similarly good at inhibiting interfering stimulus features in the bulk of their responses.
    However, bilinguals did not have as many very slow responses as monolinguals.
     
    These results suggest that bilingual speakers have better-sustained attention than monolingual speakers but not better inhibition abilities.
     
    Researcher Andrea Krott explained, “While there is plenty of evidence that there are cognitive benefits to being bilingual, there are also scholars that question the evidence due to replication failures. Our findings suggest that the way that data has been analysed might not have only led to the wrong conclusion that bilinguals have superior inhibition abilities, it might have also contributed to these replication failures. 
     
    Together with other evidence, our research suggests that the lifetime task of switching between languages appears to enhance the ability to maintain attention.”
     
    She added, “The next challenge is to determine how these behavioural changes are brought about by changes in the brain. It is already well known that the experience of speaking another language changes the structure of the brain and how it functions. But we do not understand very well how these changes lead to changes in behaviour.”
     
    The study was published in Bilingualism: Language and Cognition journal.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Facebook Helps Elderly Rekindle Old Flames

    Facebook Helps Elderly Rekindle Old Flames
    In your 50s and miss your old flame? You could probably try your luck on Facebook as a survey suggests many senior British people are already searching for girlfriends of their younger days on the social networking site.

    Facebook Helps Elderly Rekindle Old Flames

    With Fun And Trivia, This Bhagavad Gita Is For All Ages

    With Fun And Trivia, This Bhagavad Gita Is For All Ages
    The Bhagvad Gita has been a universal, all-time bestseller. But even its translated versions in a host of languages has been rather difficult for adults and the young alike to fathom in its true spirit, leave alone its original text in Sanskrit.

    With Fun And Trivia, This Bhagavad Gita Is For All Ages

    Why One Woman Doesn't Gift Perfume To Another

    Why One Woman Doesn't Gift Perfume To Another
    Women who do buy or share fragrances with other women choose fragrances they do not like themselves - or no longer value, the findings showed.

    Why One Woman Doesn't Gift Perfume To Another

    NASA's New Horizons To Become The First Spacecraft To Fly By Pluto

    NASA's New Horizons To Become The First Spacecraft To Fly By Pluto
    On Tuesday, however, scientists will get their closest and clearest look at the dwarf planet when NASA's New Horizons spacecraft is expected to get within 12,500 kilometres of its surface.

    NASA's New Horizons To Become The First Spacecraft To Fly By Pluto

    Why Female Bosses Freak Men Out

    Why Female Bosses Freak Men Out
    Men may feel threatened by female bosses and act more assertively towards them than male supervisors, new research says.

    Why Female Bosses Freak Men Out

    Baby Found Awake In Coffin During Funeral

    Baby Found Awake In Coffin During Funeral
    A newborn baby, declared dead at a hospital in Kenya, shocked his entire family when he woke up smiling in the coffin, a media report said on Wednesday.

    Baby Found Awake In Coffin During Funeral