Ecological Validity in Bilingualism Research and the Bilingual Advantage.

Ecological Validity in Bilingualism Research and the Bilingual Advantage. Trends Cogn Sci. 2018 Dec;22(12):1117-1126 Authors: Blanco-Elorrieta E, Pylkkänen L Abstract Traditional research in bilingualism has consistently found that switching languages is effortful, placing demands on neural systems of cognitive control. This finding runs counter to most bilinguals' intuitive experience. We review a body of recent work showing that, in fact, when bilinguals switch languages voluntarily, both the behavioral cost of switching and the associated recruitment of cognitive control areas are greatly reduced or completely eliminated. This suggests that switching languages is not inherently effortful, but rather, particular communicative demands may make it costly. The new evidence also challenges the basic premise underlying the bilingual advantage hypothesis. We articulate a more nuanced version of it, in which the advantage is limited to bilinguals who frequently switch languages based on external constraints. PMID: 30449317 [PubMed - in process]
Source: Trends Cogn Sci - Category: Neuroscience Authors: Tags: Trends Cogn Sci Source Type: research
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