Abstract

As studies of bilingual language control (BLC) seek to explore the underpinnings of bilinguals’ abilities to juggle two languages, different types of language switching tasks have been used to uncover switching and mixing effects and thereby reveal what proactive and reactive control mechanisms are involved in language switching. Voluntary language switching tasks, where a bilingual participant can switch freely between their languages while naming, are being utilized more often due to their greater ecological validity compared to cued switching paradigms. Because this type of task had not yet been applied to language switching in bilingual patients, our study sought to explore voluntary switching in bilinguals with aphasia (BWAs) as well as in healthy bilinguals. In Experiment 1, we replicated previously reported results of switch costs and mixing benefits within our own bilingual population of Catalan-Spanish bilinguals. With Experiment 2, we compared both the performances of BWAs as a group and as individuals against control group performance. Results illustrated a complex picture of language control abilities, indicating varying degrees of association and dissociation between factors of BLC. Given the diversity of impairments in BWAs’ language control mechanisms, we highlight the need to examine BLC at the individual level and through the lens of theoretical cognitive control frameworks in order to further parse out how bilinguals regulate their language switching.

Highlights

  • Bilinguals have the uncanny ability to manage their languages

  • Participants showed no difference in magnitude of switch costs between their dominant and non-dominant languages, supporting a lack of language-dependent effects in our highly proficient and balanced bilingual population; this coincides with previous findings in the cued language switching studies with Catalan-Spanish bilinguals [42,43]

  • The present study aimed at investigating the role of proactive and reactive control in the voluntary language switching through the lens of bilingual aphasia

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Summary

Introduction

Bilinguals have the uncanny ability to manage their languages. Once achieving moderate proficiency, a bilingual has the power to maintain a language throughout a conversation and avoid blurting out unwanted intrusions from their other languages. Given the need, many bilinguals can seamlessly “flip the script” and switch in and out of languages to communicate with the people around them This set of abilities is usually termed as bilingual language control (BLC) and includes a number of cognitive processes [1,2,3]. In order to study how bilinguals effectively switch between languages, most studies far have employed experimental tasks with cued switching between languages (e.g., [6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13]; for recent reviews see [14,15]). Subjects are explicitly shown what language they need to name a given

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