Literature DB >> 19379041

Should I stay or should I switch? A cost-benefit analysis of voluntary language switching in young and aging bilinguals.

Tamar H Gollan1, Victor S Ferreira.   

Abstract

Bilinguals spontaneously switch languages in conversation even though laboratory studies reveal robust cued language switching costs. The authors investigated how voluntary-switching costs might differ when switches are voluntary. Younger (Experiments 1-2) and older (Experiment 3) Spanish-English bilinguals named pictures in 3 conditions: (a) dominant-language only, (b) nondominant-language only, and (c) using "whatever language comes to mind" (in Experiment 2, "using each language about half the time"). Most bilinguals, particularly balanced bilinguals, voluntarily mixed languages even though switching was costly. Unlike with cued switching, voluntary switching sometimes facilitated responses, switch costs were not greater for the dominant language, and age effects on language mixing and switching were limited. This suggests that the freedom to mix languages voluntarily allows unbalanced and older bilinguals to function more like balanced and younger bilinguals. Voluntary switch costs reveal an expanded role for inhibitory control in bilingual language production and imply a mandatory separation by language in bilingual lexical selection. Copyright 2009 APA, all rights reserved.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19379041      PMCID: PMC2864120          DOI: 10.1037/a0014981

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn        ISSN: 0278-7393            Impact factor:   3.051


  39 in total

1.  Changing internal constraints on action: the role of backward inhibition.

Authors:  U Mayr; S W Keele
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2.  Verbal fluency in elderly bilingual speakers: normative data and preliminary application to Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  J de Picciotto; D Friedland
Journal:  Folia Phoniatr Logop       Date:  2001 May-Jun       Impact factor: 0.849

3.  Asymmetric aging effects on semantic and phonological processes: naming in the picture-word interference task.

Authors:  Jennifer K Taylor; Deborah M Burke
Journal:  Psychol Aging       Date:  2002-12

4.  Stroop performance in healthy younger and older adults and in individuals with dementia of the Alzheimer's type.

Authors:  D H Spieler; D A Balota; M E Faust
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform       Date:  1996-04       Impact factor: 3.332

5.  How do highly proficient bilinguals control their lexicalization process? Inhibitory and language-specific selection mechanisms are both functional.

Authors:  Albert Costa; Mikel Santesteban; Iva Ivanova
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn       Date:  2006-09       Impact factor: 3.051

6.  Bilingual performance on the boston naming test: preliminary norms in Spanish and English.

Authors:  K J Kohnert; A E Hernandez; E Bates
Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  1998-12       Impact factor: 2.381

Review 7.  An application of prefrontal cortex function theory to cognitive aging.

Authors:  R L West
Journal:  Psychol Bull       Date:  1996-09       Impact factor: 17.737

Review 8.  The processing-speed theory of adult age differences in cognition.

Authors:  T A Salthouse
Journal:  Psychol Rev       Date:  1996-07       Impact factor: 8.934

9.  A standardized set of 260 pictures: norms for name agreement, image agreement, familiarity, and visual complexity.

Authors:  J G Snodgrass; M Vanderwart
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Hum Learn       Date:  1980-03

10.  Conscious and unconscious lexical retrieval blocking in younger and older adults.

Authors:  Jessica M Logan; David A Balota
Journal:  Psychol Aging       Date:  2003-09
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  80 in total

1.  Self-ratings of Spoken Language Dominance: A Multi-Lingual Naming Test (MINT) and Preliminary Norms for Young and Aging Spanish-English Bilinguals.

Authors:  Tamar H Gollan; Gali H Weissberger; Elin Runnqvist; Rosa I Montoya; Cynthia M Cera
Journal:  Biling (Camb Engl)       Date:  2012-07

2.  Language switching in the production of phrases.

Authors:  Andrzej Tarlowski; Zofia Wodniecka; Anna Marzecová
Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res       Date:  2013-04

3.  The elusive link between language control and executive control: A case of limited transfer.

Authors:  Anat Prior; Tamar H Gollan
Journal:  J Cogn Psychol (Hove)       Date:  2013-08-01

4.  Inhibition accumulates over time at multiple processing levels in bilingual language control.

Authors:  Daniel Kleinman; Tamar H Gollan
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2018-04

Review 5.  A review of control processes and their locus in language switching.

Authors:  Mathieu Declerck; Andrea M Philipp
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2015-12

6.  The impact of a momentary language switch on bilingual reading: Intense at the switch but merciful downstream for L2 but not L1 readers.

Authors:  Jason W Gullifer; Debra Titone
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn       Date:  2019-03-18       Impact factor: 3.051

7.  The Influence of Word Retrieval and Planning on Phonetic Variation: Implications for Exemplar Models.

Authors:  Angela Fink; Matthew Goldrick
Journal:  Linguist Vanguard       Date:  2015-04-07

8.  Grammatical Constraints on Language Switching: Language Control is not Just Executive Control.

Authors:  Tamar H Gollan; Matthew Goldrick
Journal:  J Mem Lang       Date:  2016-05-18       Impact factor: 3.059

9.  Using what's there: Bilinguals adaptively rely on orthographic and color cues to achieve language control.

Authors:  Julie Fadlon; Chuchu Li; Anat Prior; Tamar H Gollan
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2019-07-31

10.  Intact reversed language-dominance but exaggerated cognate effects in reading aloud of language switches in bilingual Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  Tamar H Gollan; Chuchu Li; Alena Stasenko; David P Salmon
Journal:  Neuropsychology       Date:  2019-09-23       Impact factor: 3.295

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