much-used   neural  paths,  while   new tricks  require the connecting  up  of  groups  of
neurones    not in  the habit   of  working together;   and the flow    of  nerve   energy  is
more    easily  accomplished    in  the neurones    accustomed  to  working together.   One
who learns  to  speak   a   foreign language    late    in  life    never   attains the facility    and
ease    that    might   have    been    reached at  an  earlier age.    This    is  because the neural
paths   for speech  are already set for his mother-tongue,  and,    with    the lessened
plasticity  of  age,    the new paths   are hard    to  establish.
The connections between the various brain   areas,  or  groups  of  neurones,   are,    as
we  have    seen    in  an  earlier chapter,    accomplished    by  means   of  association fibers.
This    function    requires    millions    of  neurones,   which   unite   every   part    of  the cortex
with    every   other   part,   thus    making  it  possible    for a   neural  activity    going   on  in
any particular  center  to  extend  to  any other   center  whatsoever. In  the relatively
unripe  brain   of  the child,  the association fibers  have    not yet set up  most    of  their
connections.     The     age     at  which   memory  begins  is  determined  chiefly     by  the
development of  a   sufficient  number  of  association fibers  to  bring   about   recall.
The  more    complex     reasoning,  which   requires    many    different   associative
connections,    is  impossible  prior   to  the existence   of  adequate    neural  development.
It  is  this    fact    that    makes   it  futile  to  attempt to  teach   young   children    the more
complicated processes   of  arithmetic, grammar,    or  other   subjects.   They    are not
yet  equipped    with    the     requisite   brain   machinery   to  grasp   the     necessary
associations.
FIG.    18.—Diagrammatic    scheme  of  association,    in  which   V   stands  for the visual, A   for the
auditory,   G   for the gustatory,  M   for the motor,  and T   for the thought and feeling centers of  the
cortex.Association the Basis of Memory.—Without the machinery and processes of
