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Bilingualism and Cognitive Development: Evidence for Changes in Attentional Control Ellen Bialystok York University

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Page 1: Bialystok Presentation

Bilingualism and Cognitive Development: Evidence for Changes in Attentional Control

Ellen BialystokYork University

Page 2: Bialystok Presentation

Language Representation in Bilinguals

L1

L1

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L1

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L1Attend

IgnoreAttend

Ignore

Switch

ExecutiveControl

ExecutiveControlAdvantages

Page 3: Bialystok Presentation

Development of Executive Processes

• Last area of brain (frontal lobes) to mature• Last cognitive skills to develop in

childhood, first to decline with aging• Children typically develop control over

attention and inhibition at about 5 years• Experience in managing two languages

may promote this development

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1. Perceptual Organization and Meaning

• Embedded Figures Test is test of field-dependence/field-independence and a measure of intelligence

• Compare to misleading context of ambiguous figures

• Participants – 5 ½ years olds27 Monolinguals26 Bilinguals

Page 5: Bialystok Presentation

Children’s Embedded Figures Test

• Perceptual analysis of complex figure to find simple component

• Requires inhibition of overall perceptual configuration and interpretation of parts

• Items divided into tent (triangle) and house shapes

• Score is total of two sections

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Embedded Figures Test: Tent

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Embedded Figures Test: House

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Embedded Figures TaskBialystok & Shapero, 2005

0

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Tent House

Item Type

Mea

n N

umbe

r C

orre

ct

MonolingualBilingual

Page 9: Bialystok Presentation

Ambiguous Figure Reversals

• Ability to see an alternative interpretation of an ambiguous figure develops at around 6 years

• Need to assign new interpretation to perceptual stimulus inhibit previous interpretation?

• Create a graduated scale for degree of ability

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Ambiguous Images

Content Figure-Ground

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Scoring System

• 5: Spontaneous identification• 4: Identify one feature• 3: Identify second feature• 2: Name alternative image• 1: Disambiguated image of

alternative • 0: No idea!

Criterion: Child indicates two features of alternative image

Points

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Disambiguated Images (1 point)

“man” “rat”

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Reversibility ScoresBialystok & Shapero, 2005

00.5

11.5

22.5

33.5

44.5

5

rat/man duck/rabbit vase/face sax/woman

Mea

n Sc

ore

MonolingualBilingual

** *

ContentFigure-Ground

Page 14: Bialystok Presentation

Embedded Figures vs Reversible Figures

• EFT requires pattern analysis to find the hidden component. There is no conflict.

• Ambiguous figures requires re-assigning a meaning that conflicts with the current interpretation. It must stop being “a duck” for the image to reverse.

• Effect of bilingualism is in processing conflict

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2. Dimension Change Card Sort Task

• Bidimensional stimuli sorted by one dimension, then other

• Young children fail to switch second time

• Perceptual: colour-shape• Conceptual: function-

location

Shape-Colour

Bialystok, 1999: N=60, 4 ½ yrsBialystok & Martin, 2004: Study 1 N=67,6 yrs; Study 3 N=51, 5 ½ yrs

Function-Location

Page 16: Bialystok Presentation

Post-Switch Scores in DCCSBialystok, 1999; Bialystok & Martin, 2004

Perceptual Stimuli:Colour-Shape

0123456789

10

B&M,2004,1 B&M,2004,3

Monolingual Bilingual

Conceptual Stimuli:Function-Location

0123456789

10

B,1999 B&M,2004

Monolingual Bilingual

* *

Page 17: Bialystok Presentation

Perceptual vs. Conceptual Stimuli

• Perceptual feature salient – represented “round one”; Re-represent “yellow one”

• Conflict between representations (cf. Ambiguous Figures)

• Function-location stimuli have no perceptual conflict – stimulus interpreted individually (cf. Embedded Figures)

• Bilingual advantage for resolving perceptual conflict

Page 18: Bialystok Presentation

3. Simon Effect

• Prepotent response to position cues• Stimuli contain target and (irrelevant)

position cuesPosition consistent with R congruentPosition conflicts with R incongruent

• Simon effect (SE) is RT cost for incongruent trials

• Conflict resolution should be easier for bilinguals, so smaller SE

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Rule: red square left green square right

RL

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Simon EffectRule: red square left green square right

Congruent

Incongruent

SE = Incongruent - Congruent

RL

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Simon Task by Language for ChildrenMartin & Bialystok, submitted

200

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Congruent Incongruent Simon Effect

Mea

n R

T m

s

MonolingualBilingual

N=344 ½ year olds

* *

*

Page 22: Bialystok Presentation

Adults and Aging: Simon TaskBialystok, Craik, Klein, & Viswanathan, 2004

• 94 participants between 30 and 80 years• Half bilingual matched by age• Background measures of working memory,

language proficiency, intelligence (Cattell)

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ControlRule: red square left green square right

RL

Page 24: Bialystok Presentation

Mean RT for Control by Decade

0150300450600750900

1050120013501500

30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70-79

Age

Mea

n R

T (m

s)

Monolingual Bilingual

Page 25: Bialystok Presentation

Simon EffectRule: red square left green square right

RL

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Mean Simon Effect by Decade

0100200300400500600700800900

1000

30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70-79

Age

RT

Diff

eren

ce (m

s)

Monolingual Bilingual

Page 27: Bialystok Presentation

4. Stroop Task

• Prototypical task for frontal executive processing

• Bilingual Stroop effect: SE across languages = SE within languages

• (Almost) no research examining SE within a language comparing conflict resolution for monolinguals and bilinguals

• Bilinguals should resolve conflict more easily and show a smaller SE

Page 28: Bialystok Presentation

Sample

• 96 participants: 24 young monolinguals, 21 years24 young bilinguals, 20 years24 older monolinguals, 67 years24 older bilinguals, 68 years

• Bilinguals fully balanced lifelong bilinguals• Variety of language pairs

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Stroop Task

XXX

RED BLUE

RED

Experimental

Congruent

Incongruent

ControlStroop Effect

Colour

Word

Correct answer: “Red”

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Stroop Control Conditions

XXX

RED

Control

Colour200

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800

Colour

Young:Mono Young:BiOld:Mono Old:Bi

Age: n.s.Lang: F < 1

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Word

Young:Mono Young:BiOld:Mono Old:Bi

Age: n.s.Lang: F < 1Word

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Stroop Effect by Group

100

150

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Stroop Effect

Mea

n D

iff R

T (In

cong

- C

ong)

Young MonoYoung BilingOld MonoOld Biling

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Language Representation in Bilinguals

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IgnoreExecutiveControl

Switch

Lexical Conflict

Lexical Retrieval Deficits

ExecutiveControlAdvantages

Page 33: Bialystok Presentation

Bilingualism and Lexical Access

• Control advantages and EF processing differences come from linguistic conflict

• Need to resolve linguistic conflict beneficial to these processes

• But the problem of linguistic conflict remains

• Are there group differences in lexical access?

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Receptive Vocabulary

• PPVT scores as rough vocabulary size

• Frequent reports of bilingual deficits

• Combined data: N=5285 yrs: N=976 yrs: N=3417 yrs: N=568 yrs: N=34 80

859095

100105110115120

5 6 7 8

Monolingual Bilingual

* * *

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Lexical Retrieval

0102030

40506070

Boston Fluency

Young:Mono Young:BiOld:Mono Old:Bi

* ** *

• Younger & older adults (from Stroop), N=96

• Boston Picture Naming

• Letter and category fluency“F” “A” “S” “Animals”

Page 36: Bialystok Presentation

Bilingual Effects on Cognition

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Lexical Conflict

CognitiveControlAdvantages

Lexical Retrieval Deficits

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Summary of Bilingual EffectsAdvantages to executive function• Control of attention

Simon task, Stroop task• Switching

Embedded figures, DCCSDisadvantages to lexical retrieval• Vocabulary

PPVT• Fluency

Fluency and Boston Naming

Page 38: Bialystok Presentation

Credits

• Fergus Craik• Ray Klein• Gigi Luk• Michelle Martin• Jeni Pathman• Dana Shapero• Mythili Viswanathan

Funding