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

Bilingual infants prefer baby talk, especially when it's one of their native languages

Krista Byers-Heinlein helms a global research consortium on ways to better understand early language development

Bilingual infants prefer baby talk, especially when it's one of their native languages
2021-03-24
(Press-News.org) Infants prefer baby talk in any language, but particularly when it's in a language they're hearing at home.

A unique study of hundreds of babies involving 17 labs on four continents showed that all babies respond more to infant-directed speech -- baby talk -- than they do to adult-directed speech. It also revealed that babies as young as six months can pick up on differences in language around them.

"We were able to compare babies from bilingual backgrounds to babies from monolingual backgrounds, and what seemed to matter the most was the match between the language they heard in their everyday environment and the language we were playing them in the study," says primary investigator Krista Byers-Heinlein, an associate professor of psychology in the Faculty of Arts and Science. The study was published in the journal Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science.

Looking is listening The study is one of the first papers published by the ManyBabies consortium, a five-year, all-volunteer collaboration between researchers across the globe. This study, involving labs in Canada, the United States, Europe, Australia and Singapore, tested 333 bilingual and 385 monolingual children aged between six and 15 months.

While each lab recruited and tested their participants individually, there were certain similarities across all of them. First, the bilingual babies shared at least one of their two languages with the monolinguals; second, testing procedures were held constant within each lab. Babies were separated into groups of six- to nine-month-olds and 12- to 15-month-olds.

Each baby was played short, pre-recorded tapes of English-speaking mothers using infant-directed and adult-directed speech. The researchers then measured each baby's looking time while those recordings were playing.

"Looking indicates that they are listening," explains Byers-Heinlein, who directs the Concordia Infant Research Lab.

Not all of the babies were from homes in which English was spoken. The global nature of the study ensured many different language combinations were represented. Nevertheless, all children, regardless of language, preferred infant-directed English to adult-directed English. Those children who did come from homes in which English was spoken paid even more attention to the infant-directed speech.

"The more familiar they were with the language, the more they liked that infant-directed speech," Byers-Heinlein notes. "And a baby who is hearing English 75 per cent of the time in their home would show a greater preference than a baby who is hearing English 25 per cent of the time."

A new way to conduct research ManyBabies is not just an exciting research project to Byers-Heinlein; she considers it a groundbreaking example of international cooperation among peers who found ways to work together despite differences in location, language and resources.

Each lab was working autonomously in recruiting and testing their children, and the consortium's non-hierarchical nature gave researchers the flexibility they needed to conduct their research in a manner that was most appropriate to them. By spreading recruitment over 17 different labs, the researchers also benefited from an unusually rich data set.

Byers-Heinlein describes the novel approach as a proof of concept. She believes the consortium can build on the experience of running this study in 17 different infant labs across the world to expand and test future research questions.

"We can really make progress in understanding bilingualism, and especially the variability of bilingualism, thanks to our access to all these different communities."

INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Bilingual infants prefer baby talk, especially when it's one of their native languages

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Scientists discover how humans develop larger brains than other apes

Scientists discover how humans develop larger brains than other apes
2021-03-24
A new study is the first to identify how human brains grow much larger, with three times as many neurons, compared with chimpanzee and gorilla brains. The study, led by researchers at the Medical Research Council (MRC) Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, UK, identified a key molecular switch that can make ape brain organoids grow more like human organoids, and vice versa. The study, published in the journal END ...

Engineered immune cells deliver anticancer signal, prevent cancer from spreading

2021-03-24
Scientists have genetically engineered immune cells, called myeloid cells, to precisely deliver an anticancer signal to organs where cancer may spread. In a study of mice, treatment with the engineered cells shrank tumors and prevented the cancer from spreading to other parts of the body. The study, led by scientists at the National Cancer Institute's (NCI) Center for Cancer Research, part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), was published March 24, 2021, in Cell. "This is a novel approach to immunotherapy that appears to have promise as a potential treatment for metastatic cancer," said the study's leader, Rosandra Kaplan, M.D., of NCI's Center for Cancer Research. Metastatic cancer--cancer that has spread from its original location to other parts of the body--is notoriously ...

Risk of suicide attempt after diagnosis of dementia

2021-03-24
What The Study Did: Researchers evaluated the association between a recent diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment or dementia and the risk of attempting suicide among older adults. Authors: Amy L Byers, Ph.D., M.P.H., of the University of California, San Francisco, is the corresponding author. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2021.0150) Editor's Note: The article includes conflict of interest and funding and support disclosures. Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial ...

Remdesivir and clinical improvement in hospitalized patients with COVID-19

2021-03-24
What The Study Did: This comparative effectiveness research study that included a high proportion of non-White individuals assesses whether remdesivir administered alone or with corticosteroids is associated with time to clinical improvement or time to death in patients hospitalized with confirmed COVID-19. Authors: Brian T. Garibaldi, M.D,. M.E.H.P., of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, is the corresponding author. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.3071) Editor's Note: The article includes conflict of interest and funding/support disclosures. ...

Microaggressions against surgeons, anesthesiologists

2021-03-24
What The Study Did: This survey study investigated the frequency and nature of sexist and racial/ethnic microaggressions against female and racial/ethnic-minority surgeons and anesthesiologists and the association with physician burnout. Authors: Neha T. Sudol, M.D., of the Southern California Permanente Medical Group in Irvine, is the corresponding author. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamasurg.2021.0265) Editor's Note: The article includes funding/support disclosures. Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial ...

Female salmon are dying at higher rates than male salmon

Female salmon are dying at higher rates than male salmon
2021-03-24
Female adult sockeye from the Fraser River are dying at significantly higher rates than their male counterparts on the journey back to their spawning grounds, finds new UBC research. For every male salmon that doesn't make it to their natal stream, at least two, sometimes three female salmon die. "This is causing skewed sex ratios in their spawning grounds, something that has been observed in recent years," says lead researcher Dr. Scott Hinch, a professor in the faculty of forestry and head of the Pacific Salmon Ecology and Conservation Laboratory at UBC. "The implications on the health of Fraser River stocks are concerning, particularly as Pacific ...

Medical imaging dimensionality mismatch

Medical imaging dimensionality mismatch
2021-03-24
Three-dimensional or "volumetric" images are widely used in medical imaging. These images faithfully represent the 3D spatial relationships present in the body. Yet 3D images are typically displayed on a two-dimensional monitor, which creates a dimensionality mismatch that must be resolved in a clinical setting where practitioners must search a 2D or a 3D image to find a particular trait or target of interest. To learn more about this problem, Craig K. Abbey, Miguel A. Lago, and Miguel P. Eckstein, of the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences at University of California Santa Barbara, used techniques from the field of vision science to examine how the observers use information in images to perform a given task. Their research, published in the Journal of ...

Family ties protect against opioid misuse among U.S. young adults

Family ties protect against opioid misuse among U.S. young adults
2021-03-24
Syracuse, N.Y. - As opioid use disorders and overdoses continue to skyrocket in the United States, a study by researchers from Syracuse University and Pennsylvania State University shows that unmarried young adults who do not have children are mostly likely to misuse opioids. The growing number of these "disconnected" young adults may also result in continued rises in substance use disorders and overdoses, the researchers say. The study, "Opioid misuse and family structure: Changes and continuities in the role of marriage and children over two decades," was published ...

Small robot swimmers that heal themselves from damage (video)

Small robot swimmers that heal themselves from damage (video)
2021-03-24
Living tissue can heal itself from many injuries, but giving similar abilities to artificial systems, such as robots, has been extremely challenging. Now, researchers reporting in ACS' Nano Letters have developed small, swimming robots that can magnetically heal themselves on-the-fly after breaking into two or three pieces. The strategy could someday be used to make hardier devices for environmental or industrial clean up, the researchers say. Watch a video of the self-healing swimmers here. Scientists have developed small robots that can "swim" through fluids ...

Updated Cochrane review assesses how accurate rapid tests are for detecting COVID-19

2021-03-24
Today, Cochrane, a global independent network that gathers and summarizes the best evidence from research to help informed health decision-making, publishes an updated systematic review assessing rapid tests for the detection of SARS-CoV-2 infection (COVID-19). The review shows that rapid antigen tests are better at correctly identifying cases of COVID-19 in people with symptoms than in people without symptoms. There are large differences in the accuracy of different brands of test, with very few meeting the World Health Organization (WHO) minimum acceptable performance standards. During the COVID-19 pandemic, swift diagnosis of people who are infected with SARS-CoV-2 is important. Then decisions ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

PCORI awards new patient-centered CER to support informed health care decisions

Global integration of traditional and modern medicine: policy developments, regulatory frameworks, and clinical integration model

How to find a cryptic animal: Recording the elusive beaked whale in the Foz do Amazonas Basin

Long COVID and food insecurity in US adults, 2022-2023

Bariatric surgery and incident development of obesity-related comorbidities

Microbiome instability linked to poor growth in kids

Can a healthy gut microbiome help prevent childhood stunting?

Achieving low resistance and high performance in MTJs using high-entropy oxides

Gut microbiome influences proteins that drive aging and disease

NIH funds first-of-its-kind center to study resilience and aging

Mesonephric carcinoma and mesonephric-like adenocarcinoma of the female genital tract

Rural patients in the United States still face barriers to telehealth access

Emphysema at CT lung screening increases death risk in asymptomatic adults

Brain iron on MRI predicts cognitive impairment, decline

The ISSCR partners with Nuffield Council on Bioethics to compile global horizon scan on stem cell research

Machine learning unveils COPD patient clusters and quality of life associations in China

No sign of toxic effects of inhaled anesthesia in young children

CUNY SPH expands curriculum with concentration in sexual and reproductive justice and health

High consumption of ultra-processed foods linked to systemic inflammation

City of Hope launches transformative national clinical trials model to accelerate cancer research

Inside an academic scandal: a story of fraud and betrayal

Innovative ultrasonic regeneration restores nano-phase change emulsions for low-temperature applications

Targeted snow monitoring at hotspots outperforms basin-wide surveys in predicting water supply

Decades-old barrels of industrial waste still impacting ocean floor off Los Angeles

Finalists announced for the 2025 Blavatnik National Awards for Young Scientists

Alkali waste dumped in the Pacific Ocean created alkalophilic ecosystems

Bacterial ink to restore coral reefs

AI-based satellite count of migrating wildebeest

Bee-sting inspired microneedles from Chung-Ang University could revolutionize drug delivery

Pusan National University researchers reveal how uneven ocean warming is altering propagation of the Madden-Julian oscillation

[Press-News.org] Bilingual infants prefer baby talk, especially when it's one of their native languages
Krista Byers-Heinlein helms a global research consortium on ways to better understand early language development