Abstract

The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) is activated when bilinguals switch between languages. Language switching can also elicit the N2 event-related potential (ERP). This ERP component appears to capture the cognitive control processes related to conflict monitoring, response selection and response inhibition. In the present study, continuous theta-burst stimulation (cTBS) was used to examine the role of the left DLPFC in bilingual language switching, using a picture-naming task. Participants in the study were 17 Afrikaans-English bilinguals. The picture-naming task consisted of non-switch and switch trials. On non-switch trials, participants named two consecutive pictures in the same language. On switch trials, participants named consecutive pictures in different languages (e.g., Afrikaans and then English). The participants completed three testing sessions. In each session, participants received either cTBS to the left DLPFC or the vertex, or sham stimulation, and then completed the picture-naming task. The results showed that following DLPFC stimulation, the N2 ERP was attenuated on switch trials compared to non-switch trials. Vertex or sham stimulation did not modulate the N2 ERP. cTBS did not affect language switching at the behavioural level. These results provide support for the role of the left DLPFC in the cognitive control processes underlying bilingual language switching. Furthermore, the study demonstrates that these processes can be modulated via non-invasive brain stimulation and the effects detected at the neural level.

Full Text
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