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Scientists are finding new evidence that there is a critical time
for acquiring skills like language learning. Children who are
not exposed to a language before puberty are usually unable to fully
acquire and use language as well as early learners. There is
also evidence that the acquisition of a second language is best done
in a similar critical early period in life.
Recently, neuroscientists examined the brain activity of people
who learned sign language at different times in their lives.
They found there is a critical period for acquiring a non-verbal
language, just as there is for a spoken language. Using
magnetic resonance imagining (MRI), scientists discovered
differences in brain activity patterns between those who learned
sign language before puberty and those who learned it after.
When both groups underwent the same testing conditions, the brains
of subjects who learned sign language before puberty, showed
significantly more right hemisphere brain activity than their late
learning counterparts. They also found that late learners
never become as fully fluent as early learners.
This research suggests that there may be critical times when
language neurosystems in the brain are particularly sensitive to
change. This research has important implications, not only for
the acquisition of sign language, but more broadly for the
development of fluency in all languages.
So next time your child has difficulty understanding you, keep
talking.
MOVING
BEYOND MATTER
by Debbie Hughes
In general, people realize that there are critical periods for
learning and the acquisition of skills. We all know that
people who learn a second language early in life generally are more
fluent than those who learn it in adulthood.
There are indeed developmental windows in life. Those who
aren't exposed to the opportunities during these times may find
themselves in a position whereby they have greater struggles or
limitations as they set their course for higher levels of
proficiency in a particular realm. If such a goal can be
attained at all by effort, it seems they have to work harder to
achieve it.
Windows of opportunity exist in many realms. It is rather
the exceptional situation where language exposure does not occur or
brain stimulation fails to occur.
A famous developmental psychologist by the name of Erik Erikson
believed that we go through different stages in life in which we are
challenged with a task. It is a task associated with a life
question. The first stage, Erikson believed, concerned the
theme of trust. The challenge for the infant is to develop a
sense of whether their world is a secure place or a chaotic,
unstable and unsafe space to inhabit. During this period,
infants learn to trust or distrust, setting the stage for future
hope or despair.
The issue of trust is a theme which occurs during a critical
period of learning about the world. It is possible to learn a
measure of trust if we have been thwarted in our first attempts
during this stage. But it seems that we may never be able to
handle trust with ease.
Furthermore, we bring our own abilities or inabilities to trust
within our human relationships into the realm of our relationship
with God. Sometimes we confuse our own limitations with his
trustworthiness. What results is a distortion of God's
character and a lack of understanding of our own. Our vision
is muddied. We need a clearer vision of God's true qualities
and our own weaknesses. Only then will be see accurately.
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