Abstract

Past research shows that the bilingual experience may enhance cognitive executive function. In this experiment, we evaluated cognitive control in bilinguals relative to monolinguals by using a dimensional overlap model to predict performance in a task composed of Stroop and Simon stimuli. A group of 24 Spanish monolinguals and 24 bilinguals with differing first languages and all having Spanish as a second language (L2) did a picture naming task and a task composed of Stroop and Simon stimuli, where the effect of different overlap conditions (spatial/color) between stimuli and responses were examined. The tasks were performed in Spanish for both groups and performance was indexed with behavioral and electrophysiological measures. We hypothesized that the bilinguals’ daily language practice in L2 reflected overlap conditions similar to the Simon task. Both naming a picture in L2 and the Simon task would involve conflict at the response level. L2 picture naming entails interference between two potential oral responses, to name in L2 vs. L1 (correct vs. incorrect responses, respectively). Similarly, incongruent stimuli in the Simon task produce interference because the irrelevant dimension (spatial location) overlap with an incorrect response. In contrast, the manual Stroop task involves a different type of conflict between two overlapping stimulus dimensions (the ink color and the color meaning). We predicted for these reasons a superior performance in Simon tasks over Stroop tasks for bilinguals, while monolinguals were expected to have a similar performance in both tasks. We also expected to see a correlation between the performance on the picture naming task and the Simon task in bilinguals. However, the behavioral results did not confirm these hypotheses. In fact, both groups had similar congruency effects as measured by reaction times and error rates, and there was no correlation between the picture naming and Simon task in bilinguals. Despite this, the electrophysiological data suggested a relationship between the picture naming task and the P300 congruency effect in bilinguals. Our findings provide insights into the neurocognitive bases of language and serve as a research avenue for language behaviors in bilinguals.

Highlights

  • More investigations every year tackle the topic of bilingualism and the many questions it raises, including one of the most critical issues: whether bilingualism confers an advantage over monolinguals in cognitive control

  • As the original experiment had been done with monolinguals, the goal of this study was to consider the model in the context of bilingualism and see if our findings upheld previous investigations demonstrating a bilingual advantage in nonverbal cognitive control tasks

  • We hypothesized that the cognitive control exerted by bilinguals in a daily setting would give them an upper hand in similar tasks in comparison to dissimilar tasks

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Summary

Introduction

More investigations every year tackle the topic of bilingualism and the many questions it raises, including one of the most critical issues: whether bilingualism confers an advantage over monolinguals in cognitive control. Cognitive control is a much broader construct that involves working memory and cognitive flexibility, which contribute to an individual’s ability for adaptation in changing environments. This is important because it allows them to reduce lexical and grammatical interferences between languages and, prevents incorrect language use given the relevant linguistic environment. Because there is an overlap between the frontal brain regions implicated in cognitive control of language and general attentional and executive control, it is thought that these shared processes can result in the superior performance of bilinguals compared to monolinguals in the resolution of non-verbal conflict tasks (Bialystok et al, 2008). This paper will add to the existing body of research and the quest for an answer

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