Executive functions in French-Greek early bilinguals: In search of the suggested bilingual advantage
Executive functions in French-Greek early bilinguals: In search of the suggested bilingual advantage
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Date
2020
Authors
Chrysochoou E.
Styliani Kanaki
Vivas A.B.
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Publisher
EKT, NATIONAL DOCUMENTATION CENTRE
Abstract
Bilinguals must manage two languages on a daily basis, which requires, among
other things, dealing with cross-linguistic interference. Such cognitive training is
assumed to underlie better performance of bilinguals, relative to monolinguals, in
non-verbal cognitive tasks. Ηowever, the suggested advantage has recently been
questioned. The present study aimed at shedding light into this debate, focusing on
French-Greek early bilingual adults. Exposure to two languages from the first few
years of life has been suggested to favour the demonstration of an advantage.
Bilinguals were compared to Greek-speaking monolingual adults (matched for age,
gender, non-verbal intelligence, and SES) on executive function tasks, tapping
switching, inhibition, and updating processes. Task demands were also
manipulated. In line with the suggested advantage and as expected, in the switching
paradigm, bilinguals performed faster overall and demonstrated a smaller mixing
cost; this can be assumed to reflect better general monitoring and top-down
processing for bilingual participants. In contrast, the groups did not differ on
switching cost, neither on the inhibition and updating measures. Moreover,
contrary to what was expected, the cognitive measures did not correlate with an
index of how balanced bilingualism was. Findings do not support a general and
robust cognitive advantage in a sample of early bilinguals. Factors that might
influence its observation are discussed, along with lines of future research.
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Chrysochoou, E., Kanaki, S., & Vivas, A. B. (2020). Executive functions in French-Greek early bilinguals: In search of the suggested bilingual advantage. Psychology: The Journal of the Hellenic Psychological Society, 25(2), 76–92. https://doi.org/10.12681/psy_hps.25588