Do Bilinguals Outperform Monolinguals in Switching Tasks? Contrary Evidence for Nonlinguistic and Linguistic Switching Tasks

Author:

Mas-Herrero Ernest123ORCID,Adrover-Roig Daniel4ORCID,Ruz María5ORCID,de Diego-Balaguer Ruth136ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Cognition and Brain Plasticity Unit, Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute [IDIBELL], L’Hospitalet de Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain

2. Department of Cognition, Development and Education Psychology, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain

3. Institute of Neurosciences, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain

4. Department of Applied Pedagogy and Educational Psychology, Institute of Research and Innovation in Education (IRIE), University of Balearic Islands, Palma, Spain

5. Mind, Brain and Behavior Research Center (CIMCYC). Department of Experimental Psychology. University of Granada, Granada, Spain

6. Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats, Barcelona, Spain

Abstract

Abstract The benefits of bilingualism in executive functions are highly debated. Even so, in switching tasks, these effects seem robust, although smaller than initially thought (Gunnerud et al., 2020; Ware et al., 2020). By handling two languages throughout their lifespan, bilinguals appear to train their executive functions and show benefits in nonlinguistic switching tasks compared to monolinguals. Nevertheless, because bilinguals need to control for the interference of another language, they may show a disadvantage when dealing with task-switching paradigms requiring language control, particularly when those are performed in their less dominant language. The present work explored this issue by studying bilingualism’s effects on task switching within the visual and language domains. On the one hand, our results show that bilinguals were overall faster and presented reduced switch costs compared to monolinguals when performing perceptual geometric judgments with no time for task preparation. On the other hand, no bilingual advantage was found when a new sample of comparable bilinguals and monolinguals completed a within-language switching task. Our results provide clear evidence favoring the bilingual advantage, yet only when the task imposes greater executive demands and does not involve language control.

Funder

Ministerio de Ciencia e innovación

“la Caixa” Foundation

Publisher

MIT Press - Journals

Subject

General Medicine

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