What Bilingual Babies Can Teach Us About Language Learning by SciFri published on 2015-02-20T22:06:25Z More at http://scifri.me/0y4cux In a crowded restaurant, your eyes might drift to your dining companions' lips to make out what they're saying over the din. That’s because when speech is hard to make out, lip-reading provides extra clues for comprehension. In a new study of monolingual and bilingual infants, Northeastern University professor David Lewkowicz and colleagues found that babies do the same, shifting their gaze to a speaker's lips when they hear unfamiliar languages. But babies raised in bilingual households spend significantly more time studying the mouth than their monolingual counterparts—which suggests that lip reading could be a vital skill for language learners of all ages. Genre Science Comment by voyag3r I think babies look also to facial expressions at the moment of seing peoples' faces 2016-08-07T12:52:46Z