PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Growing up in a bilingual home has lasting benefits

'Early bilinguals' have advantages over those who learn a second language later

2021-01-22
(Press-News.org) New research has found that growing up in a bilingual home can provide unexpected cognitive benefits later in life.

The study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, demonstrates for the first time that adults who acquired their second language as a young child (early bilinguals) are quicker at shifting attention and quicker at detecting visual changes compared to adults who learnt their second language later in life (late bilinguals).

Led by Dr Dean D'Souza of Anglia Ruskin University (ARU), the research saw 127 adults take part in two separate experiments. The first involved watching pictures on a screen, with one picture gradually changing and the other remaining the same. Early bilinguals noticed these changes much faster than late bilinguals.

The second experiment found that early bilinguals were better at controlling their attention. Specifically, they were quicker at disengaging attention from one picture in order to shift their focus to another.

Dr D'Souza and colleagues had previously found that infants raised in bilingual homes adapt to their more varied and unpredictable language environment by shifting their visual attention faster and more frequently. The findings of this new study suggest that these adaptations acquired as bilingual infants continue into adulthood.

Dr D'Souza, Senior Lecturer in Psychology at Anglia Ruskin University (ARU), said: "This study is an exciting extension of our previous research, which suggested that infants raised in bilingual homes adapt to their more complex language environments by switching attention faster and more frequently.

"This adaptation may help them to take advantage of multiple sources of visual information, such as mouth movements, facial expressions, and subtle gestures, ultimately helping them to learn multiple languages.

"The findings from our new research with bilingual adults suggest that some of these adaptations, including being quicker at shifting attention, are maintained into adulthood."

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study highlights factors that predict success for treating canine behavioral disorders

Study highlights factors that predict success for treating canine behavioral disorders
2021-01-22
There is a saying that you can't teach old dogs new tricks. When it comes to canine behavioral problems, age is only one factor that can predict how well a pet may respond to clinical intervention. In a paper published in Frontiers in Veterinary Science, researchers provide the first evidence on the importance of not just a dog's age, sex and size on treatment success, but the owner's personality and the kind of bond that human and animal share. The study analyzed the physiological and psychological characteristics of 131 dog-owner pairs who attended a veterinary behavioral service over a six-month period. The statistical results were based on a behavioral assessment questionnaire that was given at the beginning, middle and end of the ...

Role of dams in reducing global flood exposure under climate change

2021-01-22
A new collaborative study led by researchers at the National Institute for Environmental Studies, the University of Tokyo, and Michigan State University exposes the role of dams for mitigating flood risk under climate change. Flood is amongst the costliest natural disasters. Globally, flood risk is projected to increase in the future, driven by climate change and population growth. The role of dams in flood mitigation, previously unaccounted for, was found to decrease by approximately 15% the number of people globally exposed to historical once-in-100-year ...

Sliding life expectancy poses gender and inequity questions

2021-01-22
Questions about why such affluent western societies are facing a reversal in life expectancy are sounding loud alarm bells for Professor Fran Baum, Matthew Flinders Distinguished Professor and Director of the Southgate Institute for Health, Society and Equity. Professor Baum is lead author of a study that offers a new perspective on why women live longer than men - noting with concern that while women live longer, many of the recognised social determinants of health are worse for women than men. The study serves an important reminder of why policy makers need to receive more carefully nuanced research that drills into specific gender data that can best inform public health policy initiatives. "We need gendered analysis to shape ...

Navigating uncertainty: Why we need decision theory during a pandemic

Navigating uncertainty: Why we need decision theory during a pandemic
2021-01-22
During a pandemic, decisions have to be made under time pressure and amid scientific uncertainty, with potential disagreements among experts and models. With COVID-19, especially during the first wave, there was uncertainty about the virus transmissibility, the disease severity, the future evolution of the pandemic and the effectiveness of the proposed policy interventions, such as wearing face masks or closing schools. Together with a group of epidemiologists and economists, including the Nobel Prize winner Lars Peter Hansen, Bocconi professors Massimo Marinacci, AXA-Bocconi Chair in Risk, and Valentina Bosetti investigated how modern decision theory can help policymakers ...

Covid lockdown loneliness linked to more depressive symptoms in older adults

2021-01-22
Loneliness in adults aged 50 and over during the COVID-19 lockdown was linked to worsening depressive and other mental health symptoms, according to a large-scale online study. Loneliness emerged as a key factor linked to worsening symptoms of depression and anxiety in a study of more than 3,000 people aged 50 or over led by the University of Exeter and King's College London, and funded by The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Maudsley Biomedical Research Centre (BRC) . Researchers had access to data going back to 2015 for participants of the ...

Do promotions make consumers more generous?

2021-01-22
Researchers from Nanyang Technological University (Singapore), Shanghai Jiao Tong University, and University of Hong Kong published a new paper in the Journal of Marketing that examines why and how charitable organizations can increase donations by soliciting consumers after retailers' price promotions. The study, forthcoming in the Journal of Marketing, is titled "Do Promotions Make Consumers More Generous? The Impact of Price Promotions on Consumers' Donation Behavior" and is authored by Kuangjie Zhang, Fengyan Cai, and Zhengyu Shi. Giving Tuesday, a global generosity movement, takes place each year on the Tuesday after US Thanksgiving (immediately after Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales). Charitable donations generally see a big boost on Giving Tuesday. This year, American consumers ...

Combined river flows could send up to 3 billion microplastics a day into the Bay of Bengal

Combined river flows could send up to 3 billion microplastics a day into the Bay of Bengal
2021-01-22
The Ganges River - with the combined flows of the Brahmaputra and Meghna rivers - could be responsible for up to 3 billion microplastic particles entering the Bay of Bengal every day, according to new research. The study represents the first investigation of microplastic abundance, characteristics and seasonal variation along the river and was conducted using samples collected by an international team of scientists as part of the National Geographic Society's END ...

New combination of immunotherapies shows great promise for treating lung cancer

New combination of immunotherapies shows great promise for treating lung cancer
2021-01-22
HAMILTON, ON, Jan. 21, 2020 -- McMaster University researchers have established in lab settings that a novel combination of two forms of immunotherapy can be highly effective for treating lung cancer, which causes more deaths than any other form of cancer. The new treatment, yet to be tested on patients, uses one form of therapy to kill a significant number of lung tumor cells, while triggering changes to the tumor that enable the second therapy to finish the job. The first therapy employs suppressed "natural killer" immune cells by extracting them from patients' tumours ...

Study suggests coffee temporarily counteracts effect of sleep loss on cognitive function

2021-01-22
A new study exploring the impact of repeated sleep loss during a simulated working week has found that consuming caffeinated coffee during the day helps to minimize reductions in attention and cognitive function, compared to decaffeinated coffee1. While this effect occurred in the first three-to-four days of restricted sleep, by the fifth and final day, no difference was seen between caffeinated and decaffeinated coffee drinkers. This therefore suggests that the beneficial effects of coffee for people with restricted sleep are temporary1. It is estimated that over 30% of adult Western populations sleep less than the recommended seven to eight hours on weekday nights and 15% regularly sleep less than six hours2,3. This can ...

The Lancet and The Lancet Oncology: Global demand for cancer surgery set to grow by almost 5 million procedures within 20 years, with greatest burden in low-income countries

2021-01-22
A modelling study suggests that demand for cancer surgery will rise by 52% - equal to 4.7 million procedures - between 2018 and 2040, with the greatest relative increase in low-income countries, which already have substantially lower staffing levels than high-income countries. A separate observational study comparing global cancer surgery outcomes also suggests that patients in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are four times more likely to die from colorectal or gastric cancer (odds of 4.59 and 3.72, respectively) than those in high-income countries (HICs) currently, and that poor provision of care ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New paper-based device boosts HIV test accuracy from dried blood samples

Pay-for-performance metrics must be more impactful and physician-controlled

GLP-1RAs may offer modest antidepressant effects compared to DPP4is but not SGLT-2is

Performance-based reimbursement increases administrative burden and moral distress, lowers perceived quality of care

Survey finds many Americans greatly overestimate primary care spending

Researchers advance RNA medical discovery decades ahead of schedule

Immune ‘fingerprints’ aid diagnosis of complex diseases in Stanford Medicine study

Ancient beaches testify to long-ago ocean on Mars

Gulf of Mars: Rover finds evidence of ‘vacation-style’ beaches on Mars

MSU researchers use open-access data to study climate change effects in 24,000 US lakes

More than meets the eye: An adrenal gland tumor is more complex than previously thought

Origin and diversity of Hun Empire populations

New AI model measures how fast the brain ages

This new treatment can adjust to Parkinson's symptoms in real time

Bigger animals get more cancer, defying decades-old belief

As dengue spreads, researchers discover a clue to fighting the virus

Teaming up tiny robot swimmers to transform medicine

The Center for Open Science welcomes Daniel Correa and Amanda Kay Montoya to its Board of Directors

Research suggests common viral infection worsens deadly condition among premature babies

UC Irvine scientists invent new drug candidates to treat antibiotic-resistant bacteria

A history of isolation and alcohol use may impact depression treatment

A new strategy to promote healthy food choices

Report reveals high levels of added sugar in US infant formula despite medical recommendations

Arctic study urges stronger climate action to prevent catastrophic warming

New technique to measure circulating tumor DNA in metastatic cancer may improve disease progression surveillance and patient outcomes

One day of sleep deprivation can alter your immune system and increase inflammation

Study shows primary care and telehealth can deliver life-changing diabetes care

The brain’s map of space: A new discovery about how our brains represent information

AI to diagnose invisible brain abnormalities in children with epilepsy

COVID-19 vaccination and odds of post–COVID-19 condition symptoms in children ages 5 to 17

[Press-News.org] Growing up in a bilingual home has lasting benefits
'Early bilinguals' have advantages over those who learn a second language later