Brain or hearing: A new study on language recognition

26.10.2023 07:40
Updated: 13.05.2024 21:22

In a new study, researchers looked at how quickly people of different ages can understand spoken words. 

Their goal was to understand whether it's their brain or hearing that played the biggest role in this process.

Let's find out more about how it works.

How it was tested

Researchers discovered a few interesting things:

  • People are fastest at understanding spoken words in their mid-20s to early-30s. This means that language skills keep developing longer than we thought.
  • After the mid-40s, people start to become slower at recognizing spoken words. This is earlier than we expected.
  • Older adults are generally slower at understanding spoken words than younger people. This isn't just because of hearing or thinking abilities, though. There seems to be something happening in the brain related to language.

The study raises some important questions about why people differ in their ability to understand spoken words as they get older. 

senior
Photo:Pixabay

One idea is that social engagement and staying active in society might help older adults stay efficient at understanding words. 

In other words, older adults who interact with others and stay socially active might keep their language skills sharp.

The study is essential because we don't know much about language difficulties in older adults, and it's a crucial issue as more people are getting older. 

Researchers are now looking at whether social engagement affects how well older adults understand spoken words.

Why it's important

This research showed that people are fastest at understanding spoken words in their 20s, but then they start to slow down in their 40s and beyond. 

The exact reasons for this aren't clear yet, but it's an interesting mystery for scientists to explore.
 

Kate Yakimchuk Author: Kate Yakimchuk Editor internet resource


Content
  1. How it was tested
  2. Why it's important