Summary: Bilingualism may serve as a powerful tool against age-related cognitive decline, particularly in social cognition areas such as the theory of mind. A new study demonstrates that early bilingualism leads to beneficial structural changes in the brain, including increased gray matter volume and cortical thickness, which contribute to a stronger cognitive reserve.
This cognitive reserve is crucial for maintaining social cognitive abilities into older age, highlighting bilingualism’s potential to enhance mental flexibility and attention control. The findings suggest that the earlier a second language is learned, the better the protection against the cognitive impairments associated with aging.
Key Facts:
- Early Bilingualism Boosts Brain Structure: Learning a second language early in life is linked to increased gray matter volume and greater cortical thickness, fostering a robust cognitive reserve.
- Protection Against Age-Related Decline: This cognitive reserve helps maintain social cognition skills, such as understanding others’ mental states, despite aging.
- Lifelong Benefits: The study emphasizes the importance of bilingualism for healthier aging, encouraging early language learning to preserve cognitive function and social cognition in later life.
Source: Singapore University of Technology and Design
As a person ages, changes occur in both the body and the brain. Certain areas of the brain shrink and communication between neurons becomes less effective.
“Such structural and functional changes result in an age-related decline in cognitive function, affecting language, processing speed, memory, and planning abilities,” said Yow Wei Quin, Professor at the Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD).
Cognitive reserve, the brain’s ability to adapt and compensate for decline or damage, allows an individual to use alternative pathways and brain regions to perform tasks. Naturally related to cognitive reserve is its neural basis, the brain reserve, which is defined by desirable neuroanatomical properties such as larger brain size and more neuronal synapses.
“These reserves highlight the brain’s flexibility and resilience. An individual with greater reserves is likely to maintain good cognitive function in aging,” Prof Yow added.
Among the multiple lifestyle factors that contribute to cognitive reserve is bilingualism. The ability of bilinguals to constantly navigate between languages and communicate with people of different backgrounds could enhance their ability to interpret social cues.
Moreover, knowing multiple languages is associated with stronger mental flexibility, attention control, and working memory—skills important for social cognition and theory of mind, which is the ability to understand other people’s behaviour by attributing mental states like beliefs and emotions to them.
Previous studies on children and young adults have shown that bilingual language experience has a positive impact on theory of mind skills, but would this social cognitive enhancement persist in later life?
This is the question that Prof Yow and her research fellow Dr Li Xiaoqian set to answer. In their paper ‘Brain grey matter morphometry relates to onset age of bilingualism and theory of mind in young and older adults’, the SUTD team and collaborators from National University of Singapore (NUS) showed that early bilingualism may protect theory of mind abilities against normal age-related declines.
There is evidence that learning and using a second language results in structural and functional changes in the bilingual brain. The research team hypothesised that acquiring a second language early may influence brain function and also create more efficient structural properties in the brain, which will provide reserves that fight against age-related social cognition decline.
What kind of changes in the brain would early bilingualism create that allows it to preserve social cognition, specifically theory of mind? Some researchers suggest that the association between bilingualism and social cognition manifests in brain areas involved in mental state inferences, while others suggest areas involved in language or cognitive control processes.
In this paper, Prof Yow and the team found that early bilingualism and better social cognitive performance in both young and old adults were associated with higher gray matter volume, greater cortical thickness, and larger surface area in the above-mentioned brain regions.
Her study suggests that the earlier a second language is learned, the more desirable structural changes occur in the brain and the more cognitive reserve is established to protect social cognitive processes against age-related decline.
These social cognitive abilities, particularly theory of mind, are crucial for understanding the thoughts and emotions of others. The current work provided new evidence of bilingualism having benefits beyond language skills and executive function. It supported the idea that bilingualism preserves social cognition in later life, fends off age-related decline, and contributes to healthier ageing.
Co-first author of the paper, Dr Li Xiaoqian from SUTD added: “Our findings highlight the potential social-cognitive benefits associated with acquiring a second language early in life.”
This could encourage parents and educators in supporting early bilingual education and lifelong bilingualism. While age-related neurocognitive decline is natural and often manageable, delaying the process is important to enable individuals to live independently longer.
Bilingualism can enrich and preserve social cognitive function, allowing a person to partake in activities they enjoy, maintain relationships, and perhaps even lessen the need for care in later life.
This study is part of a bigger project on the age-related psychological and neurological changes in social cognition. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data of individuals completing social-cognitive tasks was also collected alongside this study.
Going forward, the research team plans to use the behavioural and neuroimaging data that they have gathered to further investigate the effect of bilingualism on social cognitive functioning.
About this language and neuroscience research news
Author: Melissa Koh
Source: Singapore University of Technology and Design
Contact: Melissa Koh – Singapore University of Technology and Design
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News
Original Research: Open access.
“Brain gray matter morphometry relates to onset age of bilingualism and theory of mind in young and older adults” by Yow Wei Quin et al. Scientific Reports
Abstract
Brain gray matter morphometry relates to onset age of bilingualism and theory of mind in young and older adults
Lifelong bilingualism may result in neural reserve against decline not only in the general cognitive domain, but also in social cognitive functioning. In this study, we show the brain structural correlates that are associated with second language age of acquisition (L2AoA) and theory of mind (the ability to reason about mental states) in normal aging.
Participants were bilingual adults (46 young, 50 older) who completed a theory-of-mind task battery, a language background questionnaire, and an anatomical MRI scan to obtain cortical morphometric features (i.e., gray matter volume, thickness, and surface area).
Findings indicated a theory-of-mind decline in older adults compared to young adults, controlling for education and general cognition. Importantly, earlier L2AoA and better theory-of-mind performance were associated with larger volume, higher thickness, and larger surface area in the bilateral temporal, medial temporal, superior parietal, and prefrontal brain regions.
These regions are likely to be involved in mental representations, language, and cognitive control. The morphometric association with L2AoA in young and older adults were comparable, but its association with theory of mind was stronger in older adults than young adults.
The results demonstrate that early bilingual acquisition may provide protective benefits to intact theory-of-mind abilities against normal age-related declines.
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