4.4 Article

First and second languages differentially affect rationality when making decisions: An ERP study

期刊

BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY
卷 169, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2022.108265

关键词

Language; Decision -making; Rationality; Cognitive load; Emotion processing; P3

资金

  1. Liaoning Social Science Planning Fund of China [L20AYY001]
  2. Dalian Science and Technology Star Fund of China [2020RQ055]
  3. Youth Foundation of Social Sci-ence and Humanity, China Ministry of Education [21C10165001]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study examined how decision-making is influenced by first and second languages, emotion, and cognitive load. The results showed that the rationality of decisions differs between languages and is modulated by cognitive load. Furthermore, the effect of negative words on decision-making varied depending on the language and cognitive load conditions.
The present study examined how decision-making is affected by first (L1) and second languages (L2), emotion, and cognitive load. In a cross-task study, 30 Chinese-English bilinguals were asked to implement lexical-semantic judgment and gambling task. The results showed that after lexical decisions under high cognitive load, P3 was more positive for negative words than for neutral words in L1. The reverse was the case in the L2 in which P3 was more positive for neutral words compared to negative words. Critically, under high cognitive load, as the P3 effect increased for negative words relative to neutral words, the rationality of the decisions after these negative words decreased in the L1 but increased in the L2. The results moreover revealed that the increased Granger causal strength predicted more rational choices in the L2 high-load negative condition. Altogether, the findings offer evidence of how L1s and L2s can differentially influence rational decision-making.

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