Rodríguez-Pujadas Aina, Sanjuán Ana, Fuentes Paola, Ventura-Campos Noelia, Barrós-Loscertales Alfonso, Ávila César
Dept. of Psychology, Universitat Jaume I, Castelló de la Plana, Spain.
Dept. of Psychology, Universitat Jaume I, Castelló de la Plana, Spain.
Brain Lang. 2014 May;132:43-51. doi: 10.1016/j.bandl.2014.03.003. Epub 2014 Apr 16.
We tested the hypothesis that early bilinguals and monolinguals use different brain areas when performing nonlinguistic executive control tasks. For this, we explored brain activity of early bilinguals and monolinguals during a manual stop-signal paradigm. Behaviorally, bilinguals and monolinguals did not show significant differences in the task, which led us to compare brain activation that cannot be attributed to differences in performance. Analyses demonstrated that monolinguals activated the anterior cingulate cortex more than bilinguals when performing the stop-signal task. These results offer direct support for the notion that early bilingualism exerts an effect on neural circuitry responsible for executive control. Consistent with recent reports, we found that bilinguals used the anterior cingulate more efficiently than monolinguals to monitor nonlinguistic cognitive conflicts.
早期双语者和单语者在执行非语言执行控制任务时使用不同的脑区。为此,我们在手动停止信号范式中探究了早期双语者和单语者的大脑活动。在行为上,双语者和单语者在任务中没有表现出显著差异,这使我们能够比较不能归因于表现差异的大脑激活情况。分析表明,在执行停止信号任务时,单语者比双语者更多地激活前扣带回皮质。这些结果为早期双语对负责执行控制的神经回路产生影响这一观点提供了直接支持。与最近的报告一致,我们发现双语者比单语者更有效地利用前扣带回监测非语言认知冲突。