Future of Work

This test predicts how quickly you can learn a second language

Plaster phrenological models of heads, showing different parts of the brain, are seen at an exhibition at the Wellcome Collection in London March 27, 2012. We've pickled it, dessicated it, drilled it, mummified it, chopped it and sliced it over centuries, yet as the most complex entity in the known universe, the human brain remains a mysterious fascination. With samples of Albert Einstein's preserved brain on slides, and specimens from other famous and infamous heads such as the English mathematician Charles Babbage and notorious mass murderer William Burke, an exhibition opening in London this week is seeking to tap into that intrigue. The exhibition Brains: The Mind As Matter runs from March 29 to June 17.

A study reveals that a five-minute test can indicate how quickly you'll pick up a second language. Image: REUTERS/Chris Helgren

Molly McElroy
Communications & Marketing Manager, University of Washington
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Future of Work

Some adults learn a second language better than others, and their secret may involve the rhythms of activity in their brains.

New findings demonstrate that a five-minute measurement of resting-state brain activity predicted how quickly adults learned a second language.

 Two-thirds of working-age Europeans know a foreign language
Image: Statista

The study, published in the journal Brain and Language, is the first to use patterns of resting-state brain rhythms to predict subsequent language learning rate.

“We’ve found that a characteristic of a person’s brain at rest predicted 60 percent of the variability in their ability to learn a second language in adulthood,” says lead author Chantel Prat, a faculty researcher at the Institute for Learning & Brain Sciences and an associate professor of psychology at the University of Washington.

French lessons

At the beginning of the experiment, volunteers—19 adults aged 18 to 31 years with no previous experience learning French—sat with their eyes closed for five minutes while wearing a commercially available EEG (electroencephalogram) headset. The headset measured naturally occurring patterns of brain activity.

The participants came to the lab twice a week for eight weeks for 30-minute French lessons delivered through an immersive, virtual reality computer program. The US Office of Naval Research—who funded the current study—also funded the development of the language-training program.

The program, called Operational Language and Cultural Training System (OLCTS), aims to get military personnel functionally proficient in a foreign language with 20 hours of training. The self-paced program guides users through a series of scenes and stories. A voice-recognition component lets users check their pronunciation.

To ensure participants were paying attention, the researchers used periodic quizzes that required a minimum score before proceeding to the next lesson. The quizzes also served as a measure for how quickly each participant moved through the curriculum.

At the end of the eight-week language program, participants completed a proficiency test covering however many lessons they had finished. The fastest person learned twice as quickly but just as well as the slower learners.

The recordings from the EEG headsets revealed that patterns of brain activity related to language processes were linked the most strongly to the participants’ rate of learning.

But don't give up

So, should people who don’t have this biological predisposition not even try to learn a new language? Prat says no, for two reasons.

“First, our results show that 60 percent of the variability in second language learning was related to this brain pattern—that leaves plenty of opportunity for important variables like motivation to influence learning,” Prat says.

Second, Prat says it’s possible to change resting-state brain activity using neurofeedback training—something that she’s studying now in her lab. Neurofeedback is a sort of brain training regimen, through which individuals can strengthen the brain activity patterns linked to better cognitive abilities.

“We’re looking at properties of brain function that are related to being ready to learn well. Our goal is to use this research in combination with technologies such as neurofeedback training to help everyone perform at their best,” she says.

Ultimately, neurofeedback training could help people who want to learn a second language but lack the desirable brain patterns. They’d do brain training exercises first, and then do the language program.

“By studying individual differences in the brain, we’re figuring out key constraints on learning and information processing, in hopes of developing ways to improve language learning, and eventually, learning more generally,” Prat says.

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