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How Signs and Words Team Up in the Brain
CataloniaSunday, November 2, 2025
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Ever wonder how the brain handles signs and words at the same time? A recent study dug into this, focusing on how learning sign language affects the way we use spoken language.
The Experiment
The experiment involved hearing people who don't usually use sign language. They were taught some signs from Catalan Sign Language (LSC) through a simple matching game with written Catalan words.
The Twist
After learning, participants had to translate signs back into words. Here's where it gets interesting:
- The words they saw were either linked to the signs' meanings or just random.
- Results: When the words were related to the signs, people translated faster.
- This happened whether the words were in Catalan (the language they learned with) or Spanish (a language they knew but didn't use in the training).
Brain Activity Insights
- At first, the brain reacted differently only to Catalan words.
- By the end of the study, it started reacting to Spanish words too.
- This suggests that the brain's ability to connect signs and words evolves as we learn.
What Does This Mean?
- Learning a sign language isn't just about the hands; it's about how the brain juggles different types of languages.
- The study highlights that the brain is pretty flexible, adapting to new languages quickly, even if they're not the ones we're actively using.
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