Actively Recruiting
Motor Language Learning
Led by Hospices Civils de Lyon · Updated on 2026-03-04
1111
Participants Needed
1
Research Sites
478 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
This project pursues the validation of an innovative strategy to boost language learning, based on the benefits derived from sensorimotor training. The common belief of a rigid brain structure in adult life had to be reconsidered during the last decade. After training, local increase in cerebral cortex volume and thickness, the part of the brain containing neuronal cells and synapses, has been documented. Research has established that brain structures active during training expand while learning and return to baseline afterwards. The transient structural increase is thought to reflect "work in progress" within areas involved in learning, meant to integrate new skills in existing neural circuitries, via strengthening and/or selection of local neuronal connections. My main hypothesis is that other functions, as long as they rely on the activity of the same brain territories, can take advantage of this "work in progress". To use an allegory, imagine the restauration of a building (brain area). It can start after the request of improvements from some of the residents (trained function) and then become the occasion for other tenants (other functions) to see realized also their own wish for improvements. In the end everybody will benefit from the restauration, provided that they all live in the same building and everybody has posed their requests during the "work in progress". Out of the allegory, living in the same building means neural overlap of functions in the brain. The case of motor and linguistic systems represents, from this perspective, a unique opportunity. State-of-the-art research 1) proved the existence, and described the temporal evolution of brain plastic changes during sensorimotor learning, and 2) documented neural overlap and functional interactions of motor and linguistic systems. This posits solid bases for a crucial step forward, gravid of important consequences and applications. This project aims to take this step forward by directly testing the innovative hypothesis that brain changes induced by sensorimotor learning induce benefits for linguistic functions relying on the same brain territories.
CONDITIONS
Official Title
Motor Language Learning
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Be aged between 20 and 40 years old
- Give an informed consent by signature
- Be part of the national health security system (registered to the Securit�e9 Sociale)
- Be French speaker
You will not qualify if you...
- History of neurological, psychiatric, or linguistic problems
- Taking psychotropic drugs
- Pregnant or breastfeeding woman
- Under legal tutoring
- Receiving care in other medical structures for reasons unrelated to this research
- Under administrative or judiciary contention
- Ineligible for MR-exam based on screening questionnaire
- Ineligible for tDCS stimulation based on screening questionnaire
- Defined as bilingual by study criteria
- Studied a musical instrument for more than 3 years or plays it regularly (for Objective B1, B2, B3 studies)
- Previously learned or regularly exposed to language L2 and/or chosen sign language (for Objective A1 and A2 studies)
AI-Screening
AI-Powered Screening
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Trial Site Locations
Total: 1 location
1
Hospices Civils de Lyon
Bron, France, 69500
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
C
Claudio BROZZOLI
CONTACT
A
Alice ROY, CR1
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
SINGLE
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Model
FACTORIAL
Primary Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Number of Arms
2
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