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Which is probably only interesting if you know what glossalalia is or are interested in brain function.

http://blog.wired.com/biotech/#1535848


Is Speaking in Tongues Language?
Topic: Brain
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have performed the first brain-scan study on a group of Pentecostal practitioners while they were speaking in tongues, a practice also known as glossolalia.

It turned out that activity in the language centers of the Pentecostals' brains decreased during the tests, "although the practitioners spoke in a coherent language-like way," according to an email from Mark Waldman, who is editor of Transpersonal Review and is writing a book with the lead Penn researcher on the study, Andrew Newberg.


To me it's not so surprising that the language centers weren't very active. I'm not sure how speaking in tongues is coherent and language-like at all, and to me the results seem to simply suggest that speaking in tongues is not related to language. But Waldman and Newberg suggest other explanations:

… the language was being generated in a different way, or possibly from some place other than the normal processing centers of speech. For the believer, this experience could be taken as proof that another entity had actually spoken through them. For the disbeliever, it might simply mean that other unique circuits were being stimulated that directed the style and form of glossolalic speech.

Newberg also discovered, Waldman writes, that the practitioners had an unusual and permanent asymmetry in thalamic activity. The same asymmetry was found in nuns and Buddhists, which supports the theory that either intensive prayer permanently alters the brain, or that people with an abnormally functioning thalamus are more prone to having spiritual/religious experiences, according to Waldman.

The glossolalia work will soon be published in a psychology journal, Waldman said. Newberg and Waldman's book, Why We Believe What We Believe, is due out in September.

Date: 2006-08-09 07:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wuglet.livejournal.com
True.
In German it's "Glossolalie" btw (random fact of the day). ;)

Well there have been observations of newborns with bilingual parents:

1. One parent French, one German (intonation is quite different), the result was that the babies babbled in German intonation to the German parent and in French intonation to the French one.
2. Both parents bilingual as well (English/Canadian French I think), the babies babbled in the intonation of the language most used around them, the discrimination of the different intonation settled in a bit later in 12th or 14th week or something like that.

It's nearly impossible to stop a baby from learning languages, no matter hom many are around. :)

Date: 2006-08-09 08:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thewayne.livejournal.com
Cool stuff!

Pity we didn't know more about this when I was a kid. I've tried picking up Japanese and French with almost zero success in either. My teacher did tell me, though, that my French accent was quite good.

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