Children’s Language & Brain Development @ Talk to your children more often
Parent, talk to your child often. It can boost their brain response to language
A conversation between an adult and a child may change the child’s brain, and this back-and-forth conversation can be more critical to language development, say scientists.
Scientists have found that a conversation between an
adult and a child may change the child’s brain, and this back-and-forth
conversation can be more critical to language development. The researchers
found that children from higher-income families hear about 30 million more
words during their first three years of life than children from lower-income
families.
This “30-million-word gap” correlates with significant
differences in tests of vocabulary, language development, and reading
comprehension. In a study of children between the ages of four and six, the
researchers found that differences in the number of “conversational turns”
accounted for a large portion of the differences in brain physiology and
language skills that they found among the children.
The findings, published in the journal Psychological
Science, suggest that parents can have
considerable influence over their
children’s language and brain development by simply engaging them in
conversation.
“The important thing is not just to talk to your child,
but to talk with your child. It’s not just about dumping language into your
child’s brain, but to actually carry on a conversation with them,” said
Rachel
Romeo from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the US.
Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), the
researchers identified differences in the brain’s response to language that
correlated with the number of conversational turns. In children who experienced
more conversation, Broca’s area, a part of the brain involved in speech
production and language processing, was much more active while they listened to
stories.
This brain activation then predicted children’s scores on
language assessments, fully explaining the income-related differences in
children’s language skills.
Source | https://www.hindustantimes.com/
Regards
Prof. Pralhad Jadhav
Master of Library &
Information Science (NET Qualified)
Senior Manager @ Knowledge
Repository
Khaitan & Co
Twitter Handle | @Pralhad161978
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