4.1 Review

The cognitive and neural correlates of written language: a selective review of bilingualism

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF NEW ZEALAND
Volume 51, Issue 1, Pages 81-96

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/03036758.2020.1779093

Keywords

Biliterate; bilingual advantage; bilingualism; cerebral laterality; fMRI; monolingual reading; neuroimaging; oral

Funding

  1. University of Auckland Emerging Research Excellence Award [3602182]
  2. Faculty Research Development Fund (FRDF) award [3702215]

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The study found that bilinguals recruit more extensive networks when processing the second language, but show weaker lateralisation during lexical decisions in both L1 and L2. While learning a second language late confers benefits to executive functioning, it comes at the expense of decreased cortical efficiency.
Approximately half the world's population can speak more than one language. In this selective review, we consider whether there is an advantage to bilingualism and whether the bilingual brain is different in terms of both executive functioning and lexical decision-making. We focus on two functional MRI studies from our lab where task performance and brain activation from late proficient bilinguals when using their first (L1) and second (L2) language are compared to matched monolinguals. In Study One, monolinguals produced greater activation than bilinguals during Stroop performance, regardless of task demands. During interference, monolinguals showed more posterior brain activation relative to bilinguals and during response conflict, monolinguals showed greater activation in the anterior cingulate and prefrontal regions. In Study Two, bilinguals recruited more extensive networks when processing L2 than L1andwhen compared to monolinguals. Bilinguals also showed weaker lateralisation, particularly in the temporal lobe, during both L1 and L2 lexical decisions. Taken together, learning a second language late confers a benefit to executive functioning but at the expense of decreased cortical efficiency. Research is now required to determine the extent of plasticity in both language- and non-language dedicated areas, and how this plasticity is modulated by experience throughout the lifespan.

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