Science & technology | Well informed

Is being bilingual good for your brain?

Perhaps. Learning languages offers other, more concrete benefits

A head with speech bubbles coming out of it.
Illustration: Cristina Spanò
|3 min read

Reams of papers have been published on the cognitive advantages of multilingualism. Beyond the conversational doors it can open, multilingualism is supposed to improve “executive function”, a loose concept that includes the ability to ignore distractions, plan complex tasks and update beliefs as new information arrives. Most striking, numerous studies have even shown that bilinguals undergo a later onset of dementia, perhaps of around four years, on average. But some of these studies have failed to replicate, leaving experts wondering whether the effect is real, and if so, what exactly it consists of.

the-economist-today
The Economist today

Handpicked stories, in your inbox

A daily newsletter with the best of our journalism

A plant using photosynthesis to create new proteins.

Synthetic proteins are being built with the help of AI models

They could treat diseases, test drugs and boost crop yields

A pen made of a DNA strand.

A new project aims to synthesise a human chromosome

The tools developed along the way could revolutionise medicine


The kleptoplastic sea slug

How sea slugs give themselves superpowers

Their slimy shenanigans might have applications for humans, too


Distrust in public-health institutions is not just an American problem

Across the rich world politics is driving scepticism 

Scientists have created healthy, fertile mice with two fathers

Bipaternal human children, though, are still far away

Killer whales appear to craft their own tools

One group uses kelp stalks as exfoliating brushes