Affiliation:
1. School of Linguistic Sciences and Arts Jiangsu Normal University Xuzhou China
2. Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center for Language Ability Jiangsu Normal University Xuzhou China
3. State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning Beijing Normal University Beijing China
4. Centre for Cognitive and Brain Sciences University of Macau Macau Special Administrative Region China
Abstract
AbstractHow speaking two languages affects executive functions has been a long‐standing debate and the mechanisms underlying the observed cognitive advantages of bilingualism remain unspecified. Here, using multivariate pattern classification methods, we decoded spatial patterns of neural signals associated with Flanker task performance in mono‐dialectal and bi‐dialectal speakers of Chinese. While univariate approach to even‐related potentials (ERPs) showed no between‐group difference, decoding accuracy of ERPs was reduced in bi‐dialectal as compared to mono‐dialectal speakers in both congruent‐neutral and incongruent‐neutral classifications. There was no effect of bidialectalism, however, on decoding accuracy of alpha‐band oscillations, an electrophysiological index implicated in inhibition. Behavioural data analysed using the Drift Diffusion Model (DDM) showed facilitating effects of bidialectalism on non‐decision times but no effect on drift rates. These findings demonstrate that using two dialects on a daily basis enhances general attentional deployment rather than affecting specific component of executive functions such as inhibitory control. Given that the two dialects of Chinese differed almost exclusively in phonology, the bidialectalism effect was most likely motivated by resolving phonological competition at lexical processing level.
Funder
National Office for Philosophy and Social Sciences
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Cited by
3 articles.
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