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It is well known that different people have different aptitudes regarding various programming paradigms (e.g. some people have trouble learning non-procedural, especially functional languages. Some people have trouble understanding pointers - see Joel Spolsky's blog for musings on that. Some people have trouble grasping recursion).

I was recently reading about a study that looked at how the grammar of someone's native language affected their speed of learning math. Can't find that article now but a quick googling found this reference.

That led me to wondering whether someone's native culture or first language might affect their aptitude towards various programming paradigms. I'm more curious about positive influences - e.g. some trait that make it easier/faster for someone to learn a particular paradigm, for example native language grammar being very recursion-oriented.

To be clear, I'm looking for how culture/language grammare may affect the difference between aptitude of the same person towards various paradigms as opposed to how it affects overall aptitude towards programming between different persons.

Important: the only answers I'm interested in are either references to scientific studies, or personal observations from someone intimately familiar with a particular culture/language, including from their own experience.

E.g. I'm not interested in your opinion of how Chinese being your first language affects anything unless you speak Chinese or worked with extremely large set of Chinese-native programmers extensively.

I'm OK with your guesstimates not based on scientific studies, but please be sure to supply your reasoning about plausible causes of your observation.

I'm not interested in culture-bashing (any such commends will be deleted or flagged for deletion).

I'm also not particularly interested in culture-building - we all know Linus is from Finland and Tetris was written in Russia. Any culture/nation can produce a brilliant mind in any discipline. I'm interested in averages.

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Aw man, now the world will never see the dissertation I just wrote on this. What's the point of being an ex-Anthropologist if questions like this get closed? Try to rephrase it as something like "Am I justified in not even interviewing Chinese people because their linguistic structure inhibits their ability to learn the things I think are important in programming?" – MusiGenesis Sep 22 at 23:47
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Oh, and make it "community wiki". – MusiGenesis Sep 22 at 23:48
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@trigger-happy closers whose highest voted answers all seem to be on very subjective questions - seeing as to how I spent 10 minutes clearly detailing that I want as objective information as possible and preferably positive one, you might have considered actually READING through the question before closing it. – DVK Sep 22 at 23:57
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I am afraid I have not an answer to contribute. But I find this kind of questions to be VERY programming related and very useful on the long run to the advance of our profession. It may have not an immediate. It is more like Science than Engineering. I wonder why someone would vote for it to be closed. :S – vmarquez Sep 23 at 0:17
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I voted to close it because I consider it argumentative, and ultimately useless. – silky Sep 23 at 0:19
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4 Answers

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This seems analogous to the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis - that the facilities of a language affect the ease which which one can cogitate about certain subjects, or in the words of the Wikipedia article:

"The linguistic relativity principle (also known as the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis) is the idea that the varying cultural concepts and categories inherent in different languages affect the cognitive classification of the experienced world in such a way that speakers of different languages think and behave differently because of it."

( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic%5Frelativity )

While there appears to be little definitive information here, the discussions appear to be relevant to the question, and perhaps worthy of further exploration.

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-1 because people don't realize that the key word in "Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis" is hypothesis. Meaning that a thing isn't true just because some egghead (or pair of eggheads) says it's true. – MusiGenesis Sep 28 at 3:14
Moreover, proponents of Sapir-Whorf don't seem to be aware of an important fact: that most people in the world (outside of the United States) speak more than one language, and usually many more. – MusiGenesis Sep 28 at 3:18
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Disclaimer: I was a Cultural Anthropologist before I got into programming, so you know I'm going to be on a high horse, here.

Obviously, a person's history will have an impact on their aptitude for any particular task, but I think this has less to do with the structure or grammar of a person's language than it does with the particular material conditions of the culture in which that language is spoken.

For example, a pair of Anthropologists in the 60's went to various African communities and tested people's susceptibility to various optical illusions. Here is a classic one:

alt text

In this illusion, the bottom line looks longer, because the angled lines connecting it make it appear to be off in the distance.

These Anthropologists found that in many African cultures, the illusion doesn't work at all - people consider the lines to be the same length. By refining their study, they found that the only people who were susceptible to the illusion were people who had grown up in an urban environment. They hypothesized that the illusion did not work on people from remote jungle environments, because these people had little or no experience with right angles and seeing things at very long distances.

My point with this is that even if you successfully found a correlation between programmers' native languages and their abilities with certain aspects of programming, you couldn't be sure that the correlation wasn't spurious. For example, you might think that Asians tend to be bad drivers, and you might even be able to demonstrate this statistically. If you then concluded, however, that "bad driving" is some sort of fundamental characteristic of Asian-ness, you would be ignoring the fact that Asians are more likely to be from Asia, and thus to have had much less experience driving cars (or even being in cars) while growing up than Westerners (and especially Americans) have had.

With programming, we might think that a particular language inhibits programming ability, and not take note of the fact that the society in which that language is spoken has much less access to computers, and thus people growing up with that language appear to have less programming aptitude or ability to understand certain programming concepts.

In short, I wouldn't give much credence to the idea that language inhibits anyone's ability to understand anything in particular. The human mind is much too flexible and adaptable for that to be true.

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You're a programmer. If you didn't have a high-horse from that much, I'd be slightly worried. – Matthew Scharley Sep 23 at 0:04
@Matthew: you know the old saying: "never switch high-horses in mid-stream". Well, I did. :) – MusiGenesis Sep 23 at 0:06
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@MusiGenesis - pretty well thought out asnwer - thanks! However, what I am insterested in is not whether language/culture "inhibits programming anbility", but rather how it affects ones aptitude for one programming paradigm vs. another. E.g., to make up a completely BS example, someone from totalitarian state would have more aptitude for procedural languages than for functional (I did say it was a BS example :) – DVK Sep 23 at 0:07
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I added an image instead of ASCII art – victor hugo Sep 23 at 0:20
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Russians program better in groups, but only when stirring, patriotic songs from the 30's are playing in the background, and giant 60-ft tall pictures of Bill Gates are plastered on the walls. – MusiGenesis Sep 23 at 0:33
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I was recently reading about a study that looked at how the grammar of someone's native language affected their speed of learning math. ... Important: the only answers I'm interested in are either references to scientific studies, or personal observations from someone intimately familiar with a particular culture/language, including from their own experience.

I learned a lot of maths before I started programming (enough to count as "intimately familiar"), and IMO programming is relatively easy: more tangible.

Sometimes I've wondered whether it's beneficial to know more than one human language: if you only know one language, then you might think of the words "cat" and "dog" as being values, i.e. synonymous with cat and dog objects; but if you're fluent in more than one language, then "cat" and "dog" become pointers: because for example the French words "chat" and "chien" are referring/pointing to the same objects as "cat" and "dog", and so clearly there's a distinction between the word and the object.

It's disappointing that you post the question without linking to the article which inspired it. I thought of "reverse polish notation" and wondered whether that was at all the kind of differences in "grammar" that were considered in the original study.

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Apologies for no link, but I read a dead tree version and could not find any links after 10 mins of googling. Interesting thought on multi-language influence. As a bilingual developer, I can not say I conform to your theory, but i did start learning programming before I started learning a second human language :) – DVK Sep 23 at 0:29
As for RPN, I'm not aware of anything special in Polish language that would make Jan Ɓukasiewicz more likely than someone from another culture to come up with prefix logic. But what I'm interested in, do Polish programmers find it easier to grok PN/RPN than other programming constructs on average vs. programmers from other culture/language? – DVK Sep 23 at 0:34
I think they used to hire/train mathematicians to be programmers. – ChrisW Sep 23 at 1:05
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The reference you cite seems to rest on the assumption that making it easier helps with learning. In my understanding, there is a countereffect: without enough challange, you're not learning enough.

There are theories/studies (anyone with a link?) that development of language created crucial pressure on expanding the cerebral cortex and thus "made us human". (in very darwinistic terms: more grey matter ==> better language capabilities ==> better teamwork ==> better survival as a group). So language complexity can't be all bad for learning.

(My only qualification is being an eager follower of The Frontal Cortex blog, so take this with a grain of salt.)


In german we have a strange ordering of numbers: 10^0 and 10^1 positions are switched, but others are normal, (e.g. 25 is 'five and twenty', 125 is 'one hundred five and twenty'). It's been claimed that this makes learning numbers harder, and thus german should adopt a more intuitive ordering.

I guess that it helps a lot with doing additions in your head - at least if you stay below 100 or 200 - You can first add the 10^0 position and already say it / write it down while taking any carry into account for the 10^1 position.

(That doesn't continue for 10^2, I guess that would be done in writing by the majority anyway)


Also: abstractions. There are languages where numbers aren't abstracted from objects, "two coconuts" and "two sabretooth tigers" don't share a common "two" word / concept. Such a language would probably be very bad for developing math skills. Here the abstraction (separating number and object) in language is important.

Generally, I'd say the language has a strong effect on shaping a developing mind, and I see no reason why this should not extend to culture.

Of course it's still open what would be the "right kind of complexity" - for what, and how particular language features affect general improvement vs. establishment of an elite (i.e. "sharpening the skills of the gifted, while hampering the rest").

Interesting Question, no doubt - looking forward to other replies.

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"It's been claimed that this makes learning numbers harder, and thus german should adopt a more intuitive ordering." -- The French words for seventy, eighty, and ninety are "sixty-ten" (and then "sixty-eleven" etc.), "four twenties", and "four twenties-ten"; so I suppose you need arithmetic even just to count that high. – ChrisW Sep 23 at 12:56

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