时差N小时 学习一门语言(在线收听

Don:It's time to go again to the A Moment of Science mailbag...

唐:又到了《科学时刻》读信时间了......

Yael:A listener writes: Dear AMOS, Why can some people learn a new language easily but others struggle?

雅艾尔:一位听众来信:亲爱的《科学时刻》栏目组,为什么有人很轻松就能学好一门外语,而有些人却要拼命努力呢?

Don:Good question! How many languages do you speak, Yael?

唐:好问题!雅艾尔,你能说几种语言?

Yael:Four.

雅艾尔:4种。

Don:Really?!

唐:真的?

Yael:Yep—English, Canadian, British, and Australian.

雅艾尔:是的——美式英语,加拿大式英语,英式英语还有澳大利亚式英语。

Don:Ha ha. Very funny.

唐:哈哈。太有趣了。

Yael:Sorry. But really, I'm terrible at languages. But I have a friend who speaks like five. She'll travel some place and within a few weeks, it seems, she's asking for directions and having conversations in a completely new language.

雅艾尔:对不起。但是,我在语言方面很差。不过,我有一位朋友能说差不多5种语言。她学习的方法就是到处旅行,用完全陌生的语言问路,与人交谈。

Don:That could be because she has a large Heschl's Gyrus.

唐:那是因为她的颞横回较大的缘故。

Yael:What?

雅艾尔:什么?

Don:Heschl's Gyrus—it's a brain structure about the size of a finger—one in the brain's left side, one in the right. And scientists think that the bigger your left Heschl's Gyrus, the greater your chances of being good at learning languages.

唐:颞横回——一种手指般大小的脑部结构——分布于大脑左右侧。科学家们认为右边的颞横回较左边大时,你就越有可能学好一门外语。

Yael:Huh—is that because the Heschl's Gyrus plays an important role in how the brain processes language or something?

雅艾尔:啊——是因为大脑在处理语言或其它事物时,其中颞横回扮演了很重要的角色吗?

Don:Actually, no. Heschl's Gyrus is usually associated with the basics of sound processing, like pitch and volume. But it's not directly connected to speech.

唐:实际上不是这样。颞横回通常与处理基本的声音元素有联系,比如说音高与音量。但是与言语没有直接关系。

Yael:But wait—are you saying that if I happen to have a small left Heschl's Gyrus I can't learn a new language?

雅艾尔:但是等等——你是说如果我碰巧有较小的右侧颞横回,那我就学不了一门新语言?

Don:Not at all. It might just mean that you learn languages differently. And, sure, it could mean that you don't learn new languages as easily as someone with a larger Heschl's Gyrus. But you can still learn.

唐:也不能这么想。只能说在你学习过程中会遇到一定的困难。当然,相比颞横回较大的人,肯定不如他们容易。但是你还是可以学会的。

  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/scnxs/526184.html