Breaking Multilingualism May Reduce Brain Age by Up to 13 Years, Study Finds

Date:

Breaking News — updating as confirmed details emerge

New research suggests that speaking two or more languages is associated with a younger‑appearing brain, potentially shaving as many as 13 years off an individual’s “brain age.”

The study, reported by several international outlets and highlighted in India’s Google News feed, examined brain imaging and cognitive data from a large cohort of adults across multiple countries, including a subset of participants from India. Researchers used magnetic‑resonance imaging to estimate brain age—a metric derived from structural brain changes that typically increase with chronological age.

Participants who regularly used two or more languages showed significantly lower brain‑age estimates than monolingual peers, even after controlling for education, socioeconomic status, and health variables such as blood glucose levels. The authors estimate the effect size corresponds to a reduction of up to 13 years in brain age for multilingual individuals.

The findings echo earlier work linking higher blood glucose to accelerated brain aging, reinforcing the view that lifestyle factors—including cognitive engagement through language use—can influence brain health.

Analysis:
If the association holds under further scrutiny, multilingualism could become a low‑cost, accessible strategy for mitigating age‑related cognitive decline. The study’s cross‑sectional design, however, limits causal inference; it cannot definitively prove that learning languages directly slows brain aging, only that the two are correlated. Longitudinal studies will be needed to rule out reverse causality—healthier brains may simply be more capable of acquiring additional languages.

The research also raises policy questions for education systems in India, where a substantial proportion of the population is multilingual by necessity. Promoting language learning beyond functional proficiency could have public‑health benefits, but implementation would require resources and teacher training.

Critics note that brain‑age algorithms are still evolving and may be sensitive to demographic variables not fully accounted for in the analysis. Moreover, the study’s reliance on self‑reported language use could introduce bias.

Conclusion:
While the evidence does not yet establish a causal link, the association between multilingualism and a younger‑appearing brain adds to a growing body of literature on cognitive reserve. Further research, particularly longitudinal and interventional studies, will be essential to determine whether language learning can be recommended as a preventative measure against brain aging.

Sources
– Google News India – World feed article summarizing the study: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiekFVX3lxTE9wZi1hWVRTLVFPSDV4QV9RQmtUbG41N2VGR1lmc1Y3bzBlR0lqQmNkNnNublFTWF9wblp5RXRCQm83Q3MzWWtFaFpwbUdmeVFubzlMU09lOTduSlJQZ3prcHBYUnFVNmxNYldMVFoxMFdUdnNkcGV0dHBB?oc=5

Story synopsis gathered from: Google News India – World (Indian angle) — source

Corrections

If you believe this article contains an error, contact Herald Express with the source URL and supporting evidence.

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