Abstract

Studies of novel noun learning show bilingual children rely less on the Mutual Exclusivity Constraint (MEC) for word learning than monolinguals. Shifting the focus to learning novel property terms (adjectives), the present study compared 3.5- and five-year-old bilingual and monolingual preschoolers’ adherence to the MEC. We found no bilingual-monolingual differences on a behavioral forced-choice task for the 3.5-year-olds, but five-year-old monolinguals adhered more to the MEC than bilinguals did. Older bilinguals adhered less to the MEC than younger ones, while there was no difference in MEC adherence between the younger and older monolinguals. In the 5-year-olds, we additionally acquired neurophysiological data using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) to allow for a first explorative look at potential neuronal underpinnings. The data show that, compared to bilinguals, monolinguals reveal higher activation over three brain regions (right frontal, left temporo-parietal, and left prefrontal) that may be involved in exploiting the MEC, building on conflict detection, inhibition, solution of a disjunction, and working memory processes. Taken together, our behavioral and neurophysiological findings reveal different paths towards novel property term learning depending on children’s language acquisition context.

Highlights

  • Bilingualism shapes children’s language processing and language learning

  • Besides looking at Mutual Exclusivity Constraint (MEC) application, this study investigated the acceptance of lexical overlap

  • We predicted monolingual children to adhere more strongly to the MEC cue, resulting in a lower proportion of category choices compared to bilinguals

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Summary

Introduction

Bilingualism shapes children’s language processing and language learning. Bilingually developing children are more sensitive to referential pragmatic deixis than their monolingual peers [1]. When learning novel nouns [2–4] and adjectives [5], young bilingual children benefit more from deictic cues. They outperform monolinguals on some measures of meta-syntactic awareness [6] and on their ability to integrate multiple cues in order to understand referential intent [7]. General cognitive abilities such as inhibitory control [8,9], flexible switching [10,11], and memory flexibility [12] develop earlier in bilingual compared to monolingual children. Brain Sci. 2019, 9, 40; doi:10.3390/brainsci9020040 www.mdpi.com/journal/brainsci

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