• Bengalilol 5 hours ago

    Title is adult centric. All languages are foreign. It could have said: babies learn to recognize sounds before they are born.

    • Thorrez 13 minutes ago

      The point of the study was to see if just a small amount of language exposure would be enough for the unborn baby to start learning it. And the answer was yes.

      For a native language, the unborn baby gets a lot of exposure. Only with a foreign language would an unborn baby get a small amount of exposure.

      • blueflow an hour ago

        Have you ever noticed that every other adult is seemingly unable to comprehend what being a kid is like?

        • JimmyBuckets 4 hours ago

          Languages are not the same as generic sounds to the human brain. Title is clickbaity but I also think it more or less communicates the point of the article

        • NedF 3 hours ago

          > All languages are foreign.

          The babies are exposed to French the whole pregnancy and after, it's the foreign Hebrew/German they are testing for.

          This is a meaningless comment.

          The study is most likely bunk, but this nit pick is boring and wrong, they should have enough native French exposure already, it's the foreign language that matters.

          • trallnag 4 hours ago

            Epigenetics?

          • teiferer 5 hours ago

            The article explicitly mentions (towards the end) that this is far from evidence for language learning. But such a headline makes for clicks I guess.

            • vaylian 3 hours ago

              It's probably a learning process for sounds that are typical in a language. Later in life we can also distinguish different languages even though we don't speak them. Many non-English-speakers will still identify a song like https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prisencolinensinainciusol as being English, even though it only uses sounds that are typical for English.

              • dotancohen 2 hours ago

                I started learning Arabic at about 45, and many sounds I've learned to make with my mouth, but I can not distinguish with my ears when other people speak. For instance ك/ق or س/ص or د/ض.

                It's as if my brain is binning these sounds together and I can not retrain the binning.

                • tmtvl 30 minutes ago

                  Can you hear the difference when you ask someone to really exaggerate their articulation and enunciation? Because with most languages I speak I tend to have difficulty understanding people when they don't talk like a radio weather forecaster.

                  • selimthegrim 2 hours ago

                    Well, two of them you mentioned, ض/ص you can imagine the tongue making a bowl shape when you say them.

                    • cpfohl 2 hours ago

                      Saying/hearing is not the same. Parent struggles to hear the differences and says they can pronounce them.

                      Polish has a retroflex and palatalized “sh” pair of sounds (Sz vs ś) that I can pronounce perfectly but not clearly distinguish as a listener.

                      I learned Polish when I was 5, moved back to the states when I was 11, barely used it for 7 years, and relearned it when I was 18. I don’t know if (at 5) I ever distinguished between the two. But I certainly struggle now.

                      • sjamaan an hour ago

                        Same for me with Dzongkha: cha (ཅ) / chha (ཆ) and tsa (ཙ) / thsa (ཚ). I can aspirate the second of these fine, so that's not the problem. Hearing the difference is. This also makes it harder to remember the spelling as I mix them up all the time.

                        To be fair, I've only been learning for a short while (8 months or so) and haven't had much opportunity to listen to a lot of different speakers so perhaps this may get better.

                      • dotancohen an hour ago

                        Thank you. Yes, I am able to articulate the sounds more or less.

                        That said, any other tips on pronunciation are greatly appreciated! I did not realise that the tongue makes the same shape with both letters - I was not making a proper bowl with ض.

                • cgsmith 3 hours ago

                  I shared this article with my sister. Unfortunately I have lost faith in most people to read the full article. Within 30 seconds of sending the article she responds with "Sadly I don't know two languages! So we will focus on english together"

                  To me the point is to toss as much at the brain as possible. Not limit yourself or your child with monoculture.

                  • Etheryte 3 hours ago

                    A little empathy can go a long way. Perhaps your sister simply has different taste in reading than you do? For example, I opened the article and closed it pretty much right away because it has all the hallmarks of a clickbait nothing burger.

                    • thaumasiotes 2 hours ago

                      A lot of people worry that exposing their baby to another language will somehow impair its ability to learn theirs. This isn't true, but people worry anyway.

                      ---

                      The result described in this press release isn't new. We already knew that neonates are able to distinguish languages they've been exposed to from languages that they haven't been. What this study adds is "we documented an existing known result, but with some pictures of brain activity".

                      Brain activity is always good for an extra publication. Compare the classic paper Neural correlates of interspecies perspective taking in the post-mortem Atlantic Salmon: http://prefrontal.org/files/posters/Bennett-Salmon-2009.pdf .

                  • endriju 5 hours ago

                    I think about this quite often, as 2 of my kids were born in Ireland, but grew up elsewhere (Slavic country). I speak English with them, but so do some of my friends/neighbors with their kids. The other kids would seldom speak English though, while my kids seem to default to English somehow. Btw. they left Ireland when they were 2y and 9months old (now 9 and 7), never attended daycare there, were only exposed to English at grocery stores, doctors etc. My point is, the early exposure to the language seem to make huge difference. I'm sure it's a combination of other things too but I'd say it is definitely a strong factor. [edits: grammar]

                    • CaptainOfCoit 4 hours ago

                      > while my kids seem to default to English somehow.

                      > I speak English with them

                      You seem to know the answer already :) Kids regularly find "more reliable" adults and weight their opinion, manners and ideas higher than others, so if you're mainly speaking English to them, they'll default to trying to adopt to that, even if the main language is different all around them.

                    • smeeger 31 minutes ago

                      i have a problem with these kinds of titles. you always see these titles that appear to contradict themselves or baffle people in order to bait people into clicking. the title should be “exposure to language in the womb appears to have lasting impact” or something like that. when i see baffle bait on HN it just makes me feel embarrassed. i think there should be a guideline against it honestly.

                      • avazhi 4 hours ago

                        Yeah, this is a press F to doubt kind of situation, for many reasons: frontal cortex not developed, Broca’s and Werneke’s areas not developed, sounds not transmitting through a belly and through amniotic fluid into an undeveloped auditory canal, etc.

                        Easy to spot bullshit that sounds more like an April Fools post than anything else.

                        • trallnag 5 hours ago

                          Maybe this is why I'm such an enjoyer of Russian bands like Aquarium and GrOb? My parents listening to them while I was in the cooker in 1996?

                          Nevertheless, I'm basically illiterate when it comes to writing Russian.

                          • make3 6 hours ago

                            figuring out how to turn on brain plasticity and motivation networks, and just kill anxiety, would make life quite interesting. it's too bad that improvements in neuroscience are the absolute most insane Pandora's box, with dictatorships potentially rewiring their people's brain for compliance and whatnot, thought reading, thought implantation, all nightmarish

                            • yapyap 5 hours ago

                              You wouldn’t want to fully kill anxiety though, in healthy doses it serves a purpose

                              • mierz00 3 hours ago

                                The first time I ever saw a psychologist this was one of the things they told me.

                                Specifically, that athletes tend to do better when anxious.

                                I think about this very often when I find myself very comfortable and under no stress, I can feel my performance dropping.

                              • roschdal 6 hours ago

                                > dictatorships potentially rewiring their people's brain for compliance and whatnot

                                They do this to everyone already.

                                • worthless-trash 5 hours ago

                                  You say that like its a bad thing.

                                  • bloqs 4 hours ago

                                    when is it a good thing?

                                    • worthless-trash 18 minutes ago

                                      There is a lot of people that left to their own devices would definitely be a net loss on society. By shepherding them to utility and societally beneficial behaviors they will not be a negative.

                              • yapyap 3 hours ago

                                all languages are foreign before you’re born