2023 : Lié aux troubles de la parole dans la maladie de Parkinson
neuroSPEED Baillet Lab
2019 : Lié à la compréhension de la parole dans des situations bruyantes
2017 : Lié à l'apprentissage des langues (23 janvier 2017)
2017 : CBC Radio midi : 16 janvier 2017 sur l'apprentissage des langues
2016 : Basé sur notre article dans J. Neurosci
Science Daily-Jan. 21, 2016
Led by Chai and Denise Klein, researchers at 山ǿ University explored whether differences in resting-state connectivity relate to performance ...
Daily Mail-Jan. 19, 2016
Now researchers at 山ǿ University in Montreal have explored whether ... Xiaoqian Chai and Denise Klein scanned the brains of 15 adult ...
2015 : Basé sur notre publication dans Nature Communications
Top Santé
Medical News Today
Newswise
EurekAlert!
Science Daily
Education Week
Medical Daily
AlphaGalileo
/newsroom/channels/news/first-language-wires-brain-later-language-learning-257068
› ... › List of Issues › Volume 66, 2015
› Société › Science et technologie
2015 : Basé sur notre conférence sur le bilinguisme et le cerveau :
The Gazette, 27/05/2015 RESEARCHERS TO ADDRESS LINGERING MYTHS ABOUT IMPACT OF BILINGUALISM The Gazette
Interview Radio-Canada International 27/05/2015
2015 : Basé sur notre travail sur le bilinguisme et le cerveau :
Filming for weekly science program Le Code Chastenay (Télé-Québec, TV5 World).
Filming on 21/08/2015.
Interview for article on language development in young children with Julie Gould, freelance science writer and Naturejobs editor at Nature (Nature publishing group), London.email: julie.gould [at] nature.com 06/08/2015.
2014 : Basé sur notre étude publiée dans PNAS en 2014 :
Quirks and Quarks (featuring Denise Klein)
(Featuring Denise Klein)
Unconscious languages: Forgotten mother tongues leave traces in the brain (featuring Lara Pierce)
Le cerveau garde la mémoire des langues entendues dans les premiers mois de la vie (featuring Lara Pierce)
The Brain Remembers Forgotten Language
Saturday, November 22, 2014 | Categories:
The brains of infants, who were adopted and raised without exposure to their birth language, still recognize it. Our brains know languages learned early, even if we don't remember them. That's the conclusion of research by a team from 山ǿ, including , a neuroscientist with 山ǿ's Centre for Research on Brain, Language and Music, and the Montreal Neurological Institute. She and her colleagues looked at children who had been adopted from China in their first couple of years of life, but not exposed to Chinese language after that. When the researchers played tonal syllables from Chinese to these children, areas in their brains associated with decoding language sounds became active, even though they had no memory or awareness of knowing Chinese at all. This was in stark contrast to children who'd never encountered Chinese at all.
Related Links
· in PNAS
·山ǿ
·Time magazine (featuring Klein)
·
·CBC News
2013 : Basé sur notre étude publiée dans Brain and Language
Global TV News. “Can bilingualism make you smarter?” Interview with Denise Klein about her study looking at language acquisition and changes to the brain.
Learning a new language alters brain development (Aug 21.2013)
Journal du QuebecL’apprentissage d’une nouvelle langue modifie le développement du cerveau
Le Journal de Montréal
山ǿ Reporter.