Reprint

Individual Variation and the Bilingual Advantage - Factors that Modulate the Effect of Bilingualism on Cognitive Control and Cognitive Reserve

Edited by
February 2020
264 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03928-104-6 (Paperback)
  • ISBN978-3-03928-105-3 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Individual Variation and the Bilingual Advantage - Factors that Modulate the Effect of Bilingualism on Cognitive Control and Cognitive Reserve that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Medicine & Pharmacology
Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
Public Health & Healthcare
Summary
The number of bilingual and multilingual speakers around the world is steadily growing, leading to the questions: How do bilinguals manage two or more language systems in their daily interactions, and how does being bilingual/multilingual affect brain functioning and vice versa? Previous research has shown that cognitive control plays a key role in bilingual language management. This hypothesis is further supported by the fact that foreign languages have been found to affect not only the expected linguistic domains, but surprisingly, other non-linguistic domains such as cognitive control, attention, inhibition, and working memory. Somehow, learning languages seems to affect executive/brain functioning. In the literature, this is referred to as the bilingual advantage, meaning that people who learn two or more languages seem to outperform monolinguals in executive functioning skills. In this Special Issue, we first present studies that investigate the bilingual advantage. We also go one step further, by focusing on factors that modulate the effect of bilingualism on cognitive control. In the second, smaller part of our Special Issue, we focus on the cognitive reserve hypothesis with the aim of addressing the following questions: Does the daily use of two or more languages protect the aging individual against cognitive decline? Does lifelong bilingualism protect against brain diseases, such as dementia, later in life?
Format
  • Paperback
License
© 2020 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
multilingualism; bilingual advantage; Stroop task; cognates; orthographic neighbors; cognitive control; controlled language processing; German as a foreign language; bilingual advantage; bilingualism; cognitive control; individual differences; longitudinal studies; methodology; bilingualism; bilingual experiences; executive functioning; language proficiency; language use; language switching; interactional contexts; domain-specific self-concept; academic achievement; metacognition; executive functions; multilingual children; reading comprehension; reading fluency; spelling; bilingual language dominance; Stimulus-Stimulus inhibition; Stimulus-Response inhibition; speed-accuracy trade-off; attention network; alerting; orienting; executive functioning; interpreting; translation; bilingualism; inhibition; bilingualism; early childhood; attention; cognitive flexibility; aging; bilingualism; cognitive decline; cognitive reserve hypothesis; dementia; onset; bilingual advantage; executive control; language switching; shifting; inhibition; self-reports; bilingualism; Attentional Control Theory; executive function; trait anxiety; rumination; inhibitory control; eye tracking; multilingualism; cognitive abilities; inhibition; switching; disengagement of attention; executive function; cognitive effects; bilingual advantage; modulating factors; bilingualism; aging; third-age language learning