Monday, January 05, 2026

 

Neuroscientists devise formulas to measure multilingualism



New calculator measures how multilingual a person is—and how dominant each language is



New York University




More than half of the world’s population speaks more than one language—but there is no consistent method for defining “bilingual” or “multilingual.” This makes it difficult to accurately assess proficiency across multiple languages and to describe language backgrounds accurately. 

A team of New York University researchers has now created a calculator that scores multilingualism, allowing users to see how multilingual they actually are and which language is their dominant one. 

The work, which uses innovative formulas to build the calculator, is reported in the journal Bilingualism: Language and Cognition.

“Multilingualism is a very broad label,” explains Esti Blanco-Elorrieta, an assistant professor of psychology and neural science at NYU and the paper’s senior author. “These new formulas provide a clear, evidence-based way to understand your language strengths and how multilingual you truly are, bringing scientific clarity to an everyday part of life for millions of people.”

The calculator works in nearly 50 languages, including American Sign Language, and allows users to fill in an unlisted language. 

Blanco-Elorrieta and Xuanyi Jessica Chen, an NYU doctoral student and the paper’s lead author, developed the formulas—embedded in a multilingual calculator that users can deploy to measure their multilingualism and language dominance—that are drawn from two primary variables:

  • Age of language acquisition for listening, reading, speaking, and writing

  • Self-rated language proficiency for listening, reading, speaking, and writing

The calculator then yields a multilingualism score, which indicates how multilingual a person is on a scale from monolingual to perfect polyglot. The language-dominance is separately tabulated by calculating the difference in ability between languages.

In this video, a trio of multilingual NYU students tried it out to test their abilities in different languages—with results that were both surprising and affirming (video by Jonathan King/NYU).

The authors—both multilingual speakers—note that past research has shown that self-rated language proficiency is, in fact, an accurate and efficient measure of actual language proficiency. The researchers also implemented other statistical controls to minimize self-rating bias. They add that, similarly, age of language acquisition has been shown to be a predictor of abilities: the earlier one learns a language, the more likely it is they will be able to master native-like proficiency in that language. 

The researchers validated their measure by testing it in two distinct populations: healthy young bilinguals and older bilinguals with language impairments. They compared their results to those obtained from existing methods that rely on acquiring much more extensive language background information. Across both groups, the formulas produced language-dominance results that were nearly identical to those generated by more complicated measures, showing that the new approach is both simple and accurate.

“Rather than just labeling someone as ‘bilingual’ or ‘monolingual,’ this tool quantifies how multilingual one is,” notes Chen.

“This calculator offers a transparent, quantitative tool that researchers, clinicians, and educators can adopt to better characterize multilingual populations, ultimately improving research quality and real-world applications—from language education to clinical assessment,” concludes Blanco-Elorrieta. 

The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (R00DC019973) and the National Science Foundation (2446452).

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 SCI-FI-TEK 70 YRS IN THE MAKING


CHSN01: China achieves new breakthrough in fusion reactor jacket, performance leads the field



CHSN01 Jacket material achieves an average yield strength of 1560 MPa at 4.2 K, reaching internationally leading levels



Nuclear Science and Techniques

A Key Enabler for Future Reactors: CHSN01’s Outstanding Balance of Strength and Ductility 

image: 

The CHSN01 jacket exhibited better fatigue resistance than a 316LN and JK2LB jacket. The YS of the CHSN01 jacket was enhanced by 40% compared to that of the 316LN jacket, whereas the plasticity and toughness remained comparable.

 

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Credit: Wei-Jun Wang






China Achieves Mass Production of Key Fusion Component, CHSN01 Jacket
China has successfully mass-produced a 30-ton, 5-km-long cryogenic jacket using its domestically developed CHSN01 material. This advanced steel exhibits exceptional mechanical properties at 4.2 K, making it an ideal core component for Cable-in-Conduit Conductors (CICC) in future fusion reactors. The achievement not only meets stringent demands for next-generation fusion energy but also demonstrates great potential for other cutting-edge applications.

Exceptional Jacket Performance: A New Benchmark in Cryogenic steel
Testing at 4.2 K validates the outstanding properties of the CHSN01 jacket, achieving an average yield strength of 1560 MPa, elongation of 32.7%, and fracture toughness of 220 MPa·m¹/². Notably, CHSN01 delivers a 40% higher yield strength than the widely used 316LN steel while matching its plasticity and toughness, and demonstrates superior fatigue resistance.

An Enabling Material for Extreme Environments
CHSN01’s non-magnetic, high-strength, and high-toughness properties under 20 K make it a versatile key material. It is not only critical for next-generation fusion magnets but also promises significant weight savings in advanced cryogenic applications—from spaceflight fuel tanks to hydrogen energy infrastructure—potentially replacing 316LN where extreme performance is required.

the complete study is accessible by via DOI: 10.1007/s41365-025-01847-5

 

A metal-free route to fully recycle PET into premium chemical feedstocks



Nanjing Agricultural University The Academy of Science





By combining an ionic liquid catalyst with a carefully designed reaction system, the method overcomes long-standing barriers of incomplete depolymerization and low product purity, offering a promising pathway toward true closed-loop recycling of plastics.

Plastic pollution remains a persistent global challenge because most plastics are difficult to recycle without losing material quality. Polyethylene terephthalate (PET), widely used in bottles, packaging, and textiles, exemplifies this problem, as conventional mechanical recycling typically downcycles PET and limits its reuse potential. Chemical recycling offers a more sustainable alternative by breaking PET back into its original monomers, enabling the production of virgin-quality plastics. Among these strategies, methanolysis has attracted industrial interest, but existing approaches often depend on metal catalysts, high temperatures, excess solvents, and energy-intensive purification. Although ionic liquids provide a promising metal-free option, many current systems still face incomplete depolymerization and operational complexity. Overcoming these limitations is essential for scalable, energy-efficient PET recycling.

study (DOI: 10.1016/j.plaphe.2025.100139) published in Plant Phenomics on 24 February 2025 by Qingqing Mei’s team, Zhejiang University, demonstrates a highly efficient, metal-free strategy for completely upcycling waste PET into high-value chemical feedstocks under mild conditions, offering a practical pathway toward closed-loop plastic recycling.

The study first established a systematic experimental method to explore an ionic-liquid-catalyzed PET upcycling process that couples PET methanolysis with the transesterification of the intermediate ethylene glycol (EG) using dimethyl carbonate (DMC), conducted at 130 °C over 2.5 h with methanol as the nucleophile. By varying ionic liquid structures, reaction temperature, reactant ratios, catalyst loading, and reaction time, the researchers dissected how each parameter governs depolymerization efficiency and product formation. Screening of different anions in 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium-based ionic liquids revealed that acetate, with the strongest hydrogen-bond-accepting ability, was essential for catalysis, while weaker anions led to reduced ethylene carbonate (EC) formation or even failed depolymerization. Fine-tuning reaction conditions showed that 130 °C, a balanced methanol-to-DMC ratio, and moderate catalyst loading maximized performance, whereas excess methanol inhibited EG cyclization despite sustaining PET methanolysis. Time-course and kinetic analyses further clarified that PET methanolysis is the rate-determining step, while EG transesterification proceeds rapidly and shifts the equilibrium toward complete depolymerization. Under optimized conditions, this method achieved complete PET conversion, delivering 99% dimethyl terephthalate (DMT) and 91% EC within 2.5 h while using less methanol than conventional systems. Extending the method to real-world substrates demonstrated its robustness, with diverse PET wastes yielding 90–99% DMT and 79–89% EC, and other polyesters and polycarbonates being efficiently transformed into corresponding dicarboxylates and cyclic carbonates. Spectroscopic analyses using NMR and FT-IR revealed that multiple hydrogen bonds between the ionic liquid and reactants activate both carbonyl and hydroxyl groups, enhancing nucleophilic attacks and stabilizing intermediates. Together, these methodical investigations show that hydrogen-bond-driven dual activation underpins the high efficiency, broad substrate scope, and energy-saving potential of this PET upcycling strategy.

Beyond laboratory-scale PET samples, the method successfully processed a wide range of real-world plastic wastes, including bottles, films, fabrics, and industrial scraps, consistently delivering high yields. It also proved applicable to other commercial polyesters and polycarbonates, converting them into corresponding dicarboxylates and cyclic carbonates with similarly impressive efficiency. Because DMT and EC are valuable feedstocks for producing new plastics, solvents, and battery electrolytes, this strategy transforms plastic waste into premium chemicals rather than low-value recyclates, strengthening the economic case for chemical recycling.

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References

DOI

10.1016/j.plaphe.2025.100139

Original Source URl

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.plaphe.2025.100139

About Plant Phenomics

Plant Phenomics is dedicated to publishing novel research that will advance all aspects of plant phenotyping from the cell to the plant population levels using innovative combinations of sensor systems and data analytics. Plant Phenomics aims also to connect phenomics to other science domains, such as genomics, genetics, physiology, molecular biology, bioinformatics, statistics, mathematics, and computer sciences. Plant Phenomics should thus contribute to advance plant sciences and agriculture/forestry/horticulture by addressing key scientific challenges in the area of plant phenomics.

 

New study finds historic buildings contribute to urban scenicness as much as trees and water





University of Nottingham





A new study from psychologists has found that historic buildings significantly enhance the scenicness of English cities, offering aesthetic and potential well-being benefits comparable to those provided by natural features such as forests and lakes.

Dr Eugene Malthouse, Research Fellow in the University of Nottingham’s School of Economics, and Dr Sidney Sherborne, Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Warwick, analysed thousands of photographs from Scenic-or-Not – an online platform where the public rates the scenicness of UK landscapes – and combined them with data from Historic England’s National Heritage List.

The findings, which have been published in the journal Frontiers in Psychologyrevealed that photographs of urban areas which featured a listed (legally protected historic) building received scenicness scores that were 25 per cent higher than the average urban score.

 Co-author of the study, Dr Malthouse, said: “These findings highlight the positive contribution of historic buildings to urban environments and provide empirical support for their continued preservation as public goods.”

Previous studies have shown that spending time in more scenic areas is associated with greater happiness and health, making it important to understand how scenicness is influenced by environmental features. Urban areas, where natural features have often been replaced by buildings, are generally perceived as less scenic than rural areas. However, this research identifies historic buildings as a source of urban scenic quality.

The study, which was funded by the European Research Council, found that the positive effect on scenicness increases with a building’s historical or architectural significance. Grade I (exceptional interest) and Grade II* (particularly important buildings of more than special interest) listed buildings — the highest categories of national importance — were associated with greater increases in scenicness scores than Grade II (special interest) buildings. Structures listed earlier, and those dating from earlier centuries, also yielded higher scenicness scores.

The findings suggest that heritage designations made by experts and public perceptions of scenic beauty tend to align, with buildings deemed more culturally or architecturally important being experienced as more visually pleasing.

The study has significant implications for policymakers, planners, and developers. Scenic environments — whether natural or historic — are known to be associated with greater happiness and health. Preserving historic buildings is therefore not just about protecting cultural heritage, it is also a strategy for enhancing public well-being and creating urban spaces where people want to spend time.

Dr Sherborne added: “The key question now is why historic buildings consistently score higher for scenicness. Whether it's their natural materials, human-scale proportions, ornamental details that echo natural forms, or even the weathering effects of time, understanding their scenic quality could help to guide contemporary urban design.”