School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, 52 Pritchatts Road, Birmingham, B15 2SA, UK.
Department of Language and Culture, The University of Tromsø, Hansine Hansens veg 18, 9019, Tromsø, Norway; Facultad de Lenguas y Educación, Universidad Nebrija, Calle de Sta. Cruz de Marcenado, 27, 28015, Madrid, Spain.
Neuroimage. 2020 Jan 1;204:116222. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2019.116222. Epub 2019 Sep 24.
The potential effects of bilingualism on executive control (EC) have been heavily debated. One possible source of discrepancy in the evidence may be that bilingualism tends to be treated as a monolithic category distinct from monolingualism. We address this possibility by examining the effects of different bilingual language experiences on brain activity related to EC performance. Participants were scanned (fMRI) while they performed a Flanker task. Behavioral data showed robust Flanker effects, not modulated by language experiences across participants. However, differences in duration of bilingual experience and extent of active language use predicted activation in distinct brain regions indicating differences in neural recruitment across conditions. This approach highlights the need to consider specific bilingual language experiences in assessing neurocognitive effects. It further underscores the utility and complementarity of neuroimaging evidence in this general line of research, contributing to a deeper understanding of the variability reported in the literature.
双语对执行控制(EC)的潜在影响一直存在激烈的争论。双语的证据可能存在差异,原因之一可能是双语往往被视为与单语不同的单一类别。我们通过研究不同的双语语言经验对与 EC 表现相关的大脑活动的影响来解决这个问题。参与者在执行 Flanker 任务时进行了 fMRI 扫描。行为数据显示了强大的 Flanker 效应,但在参与者之间不受语言经验的影响。然而,双语经验的持续时间和主动使用语言的程度的差异预测了不同脑区的激活,表明在不同条件下神经募集的差异。这种方法强调了在评估神经认知影响时需要考虑具体的双语语言经验。它进一步突出了神经影像学证据在这一研究方向上的实用性和互补性,有助于更深入地了解文献中报告的变异性。