Boston Herald

Language helps determine what we hear

- By DARCEL ROCKETT CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Do you hear what I hear? More than just a memorable holiday song, it’s a question that got the nation talking — about Yanny vs. Laurel.

Shortly after a viral audio recording left people wondering why some heard “Yanny” and others clearly heard “Laurel,” we learned that what you heard has less to do with your auditory system and more to do with the brain.

And the saga continues: A new Northweste­rn University study has found that bilingual and monolingua­l people listening to the same person speaking can hear two completely different sounds. The research shows that one’s language experience affects even the most basic cognitive processes, according to Viorica Marian, a professor of communicat­ion sciences and disorders and psychology at Northweste­rn University.

“With Yanny and Laurel, our brain interprets the sound differentl­y depending on how the neurons fire in our brain and based on the history of our linguistic experience­s,” Marian said. “We classify the sound waves that come into our ear into linguistic categories that we are familiar with, so we hear a very categorica­l sound — what happens is the brain interprets the input that comes to us from our senses and transforms it into our perceived reality.”

Your previous auditory and linguistic experience influences how you perceive the sound around you — the world around you — she said. Case in point: If you find accents easy to understand, you may have taken music lessons at some point in your life. Marian said learning the language of music can change the way your brain processes sound.

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