- Research by AI researcher and author Dr. Emma Byrne claims that it may be good to teach your child how to curse
- Children will have the ability to understand people around them more if they are aware of the idea of swearing
The answer is, yes. There are various scientific research that supports the idea of cursing actually good for you.
The research has linked swearing to good traits like honesty, better vocabularies, better credebility, improved camaraderie with peers, and it helps process and handle anger.
According artificial intelligence or AI researcher and author Dr. Emma Byrne, teaching students to swear can also help them understand language better.
The self-titles Sweart Scientist will tell and audience at the UK’s Cheltenham Science Festival that we should try to keep strong language away from kids until they know how to use it effectively. She also states that learning how to swear effectively, with the support of adults, is better than banning it altogether.
“Learning how to use swearing effectively, with the support of empathetic adults, is far better than trying to ban children from using such language,”
Dr. Byrne supports her argument by explaining that banning it won’t be able to demystify the words in the first place. It is also possible that the children won’t be able to understand the emotions of the people around them deploying such linguistics. She said that children need to learn how cursing affects others.
Turns out that this research isn’t only based off a single study. Byrne has a deep fascination with neuroscience which led her to publish her own book Swearing is Good for You: The Amazing Science of Bad Language.
The fact that swearing may boost a person’s tolerance when in pain, it tells us that pain isn’t just a physical and biological thing, but a psychological one as well.
People may apply this to their lives or not, but the subject is still currently being explored and there is assurance that more research regarding this matter will be brought up in the future.