A developmental approach to bilingual research: The effects of multi-language experience from early infancy to old age

Author:

Filippi Roberto1,D’Souza Dean2,Bright Peter2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology and Human Development, University College London – Institute of Education, UK

2. Department of Psychology, Anglia Ruskin University, UK

Abstract

Aims and objectives: In this commentary article we consider the benefits of adopting a neuroconstructivist approach in the study of bilingualism in order to promote empirical and theoretical progress on the fiercely debated issue of whether bilingualism confers genuine cognitive advantages. Significance/implications: Although there is a general consensus that exposure to multilingual environments does not impair cognitive development, there are still doubts on the possible beneficial advantages of bilingualism. Critics argue that the evidence for this advantage might have been confounded by unsound or questionable methodological practices. Some investigators have abandoned research in this area, indicating either that there is no bilingual advantage or that it is impossible to capture and therefore rule out alternative explanations for group differences. Rather than dismissing this important theme in the literature, we advocate a more systematic approach in which the effects of multilinguistic experience are assessed and interpreted across well-defined stages of cognitive development. Conclusions: We encourage a broad, developmentally informed approach to plotting the trajectory of interactions between multi-language learning and cognitive development, using a convergence of neuroimaging and behavioural methods, across the whole lifespan. We believe that, through studying infants, children, young adults, adults and the elderly within a coherent and systematic developmental framework, a more accurate and valid account of potential cognitive and neural changes associated with multi-language learning will emerge.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Education

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1. The impact of multilingualism and socio-economic status on academic performance: evidence from the SCAMP and the national pupil databases;International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism;2024-09-09

2. Chapter 1. Language acquisition across the lifespan in historical sociolinguistics;Advances in Historical Sociolinguistics;2024-04-15

3. Does language shape the way we think? A review of the foreign language effect across domains;International Journal of Bilingualism;2024-02-03

4. The Cognitive Neuroscience of Bilingualism;CAMB FUN NEURO PSYCH;2023-10-01

5. Theories and Models in Cognitive Bilingualism;The Routledge Handbook of Translation, Interpreting and Bilingualism;2023-01-20

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