Integrating Bilingualism, Verbal Fluency, and Executive Functioning across the Lifespan
Date
2019Author
Zeng, Zhen
Kalashnikova, Marina
Antoniou, Mark
Metadata
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Zhen Zeng, Marina Kalashnikova & Mark Antoniou (2019) Integrating Bilingualism, Verbal Fluency, and Executive Functioning across the Lifespan, Journal of Cognition and Development, 20:5, 656-679, DOI: 10.1080/15248372.2019.1648267
Abstract
Bilingual experience has an impact on an individual’s linguistic processing
and general cognitive abilities. The relation between these
linguistic and non-linguistic domains, in turn, is mediated by individual
linguistic proficiency and developmental changes that take
place across the lifespan. This study evaluated this relationship by
assessing inhibition skills, and verbal fluency in monolingual and
bilingual school-aged children (Experiment 1), young adults
(Experiment 2), and older adults (Experiment 3). Results showed
that bilinguals outperformed monolinguals in the measure of inhibition,
but only in the children and older adult age groups. With
regards to verbal fluency, bilingual children outperformed their
monolingual peers in the letter verbal fluency task, but no group
differences were observed for the young and old adults. These findings
suggest that bilingual experience leads to significant advantages
in linguistic and non-linguistic domains, but only at the time points
when these skills undergo developmental changes.