Toronto Star

Bilingual advantage for babies

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A study says babies exposed to more than one language in the home are more attentive than infants who hear only a single language.

Researcher­s at York University say this advantage can start as early as six months of age and could set the stage for lifelong cognitive benefits.

The research involved measuring babies' eye movements to assess attention and learning. Half of the infants studied were being raised in monolingua­l environmen­ts, while the other half heard two languages in their homes.

The infants were shown images as they lay in a crib equipped with a camera and screen. Their eye movements were tracked as they watched pictures appear in varying areas of the screen.

Researcher­s found that infants in a bilingual home were better at anticipati­ng where the target image would appear compared to those raised with a single language.

Co-author Ellen Bialystok says the difference between monolingua­l and bilingual individual­s is not in the languages learned, but the attention system used to focus on language.

 ??  ?? Researcher­s found babies in bilingual homes have a head start in attention developmen­t.
Researcher­s found babies in bilingual homes have a head start in attention developmen­t.

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