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Bilingualism and the Bilingual Mind

This topic studies how people who know more than one language represent, control, and switch between their languages, and how bilingualism interacts with cognition.

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Definition

The study of the mental representation, control, and use of two or more languages in bilingual and multilingual individuals.

Scope

It covers evidence that a bilingual's languages are jointly active rather than fully separable, the control processes that select the intended language and inhibit the other, code-switching, and the much-debated question of whether bilingualism confers cognitive advantages. It describes the processing and cognitive findings rather than advising on language choices.

Core questions

  • Are a bilingual's two languages activated jointly or kept separate during use?
  • How do bilinguals select one language and control interference from the other?
  • Does managing two languages reshape executive control or other cognition?

Key concepts

  • language non-selectivity
  • language control
  • code-switching
  • inhibitory control
  • bilingual advantage

Key theories

Language non-selectivity
Evidence that both languages are activated in parallel during comprehension and production, so bilinguals must continually manage cross-language competition.
Adaptive control hypothesis
Green and Abutalebi's proposal that the demands of language control vary with the interactional context and recruit domain-general control networks, shaping bilingual cognition.

History

Psycholinguistic study of bilingualism grew through work on lexical organization (such as the revised hierarchical model) and on bilingual language control. Claims of a bilingual executive advantage, prominent from the 2000s, have since been the subject of vigorous methodological debate.

Debates

The bilingual cognitive advantage
Whether lifelong bilingualism enhances executive control or delays cognitive decline, a claim challenged on grounds of replication and publication bias.

Key figures

  • Judith Kroll
  • Ellen Bialystok
  • David Green
  • Jubin Abutalebi

Related topics

Seminal works

  • krollbialystok2013
  • greenabutalebi2013

Frequently asked questions

Do bilinguals turn one language off when using the other?
Largely no: research indicates both languages remain active to some degree even in a single-language context, so bilinguals rely on control processes to select the intended language.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts