Department of Rehabilitation Sciences, Cyprus University of Technology, 15 Vragadinou Street, 3041, Limassol, Cyprus.
Hellenic Open University, Patra, Greece.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2023 Aug;30(4):1187-1226. doi: 10.3758/s13423-023-02245-x. Epub 2023 Jan 26.
Whether bilingualism enhances executive control (EC) is controversial. This article reviews 24 studies on the bilingual EC effect using event-related potentials (ERPs). It evaluates the evidence based on considerations of neural efficiency, different EC theories, and accounts regarding the locus of the bilingual effect. The review finds some evidence for a positive bilingual impact. This is more consistent for the P3 and response-locked ERPs. Moreover, when considering each component independently, evidence primarily supports a monitoring and secondarily an inhibition locus. Additionally, an N2/ERN (error-related negativity) dissociation (no bilingual N2 effect but positive ERN impact, evident as smaller ERN), coupled with the P3 results, suggest that monitoring may not be the (only) locus of a bilingual effect but (an)other post-monitoring mechanism(s). Attention disengagement also receives some support. Finally, results across studies are largely consistent with the Bilingualism Anterior to Posterior and Subcortical Shift model (BAPSS): Bilingual effects, when found, often manifest as shorter latencies, larger components or wider amplitude effects during earlier (N2, P3) but smaller components or narrower effects during later processing (stimulus-locked negativities and response-locked components). However, this evidence is not unequivocal. Many bilingual-monolingual comparisons reveal null or some suggest negative or opposite to prediction bilingual effects. Second, the scant evidence about which bilingual experiences impact EC is, generally, unclear, while some evidence indicates negative effects. Third, BAPSS is often not confirmed when multiple components are examined within subjects. Finally, this literature is challenged by confounds and small samples. Further research is required to conclude a positive bilingual effect on EC in ERPs.
双语是否增强执行控制(EC)存在争议。本文使用事件相关电位(ERPs)综述了 24 项关于双语 EC 效应的研究。它基于神经效率、不同的 EC 理论以及关于双语效应位置的解释来评估证据。综述发现了一些支持双语积极影响的证据。这在 P3 和反应锁定 ERP 中更为一致。此外,当独立考虑每个成分时,证据主要支持监测和其次是抑制位置。此外,N2/ERN(错误相关负性)分离(双语 N2 效应不存在,但ERN 影响为正,表现为较小的 ERN),加上 P3 的结果,表明监测可能不是双语效应的(唯一)位置,而是(其他)后监测机制。注意解除也得到了一些支持。最后,研究结果在很大程度上与双语在前、皮质下转移模型(BAPSS)一致:当发现双语效应时,通常表现为较短的潜伏期、较大的成分或较宽的振幅效应(在早期的 N2、P3),但在后期处理(刺激锁定负性和反应锁定成分)时较小的成分或较窄的效应。然而,这一证据并非无可置疑。许多双语-单语比较显示出双语效应为零或有些预测为负或相反。其次,关于哪些双语经验会影响 EC 的证据通常不清楚,而有些证据表明存在负面影响。第三,当在受试者中检查多个成分时,BAPSS 通常不被证实。最后,该文献受到混淆和小样本的挑战。需要进一步的研究才能得出 ERPs 中双语对 EC 有积极影响的结论。