Moving From Bilingual Traits to States: Understanding Cognition and Language Processing Through Moment-to-Moment Variation
- PMID: 37214629
- PMCID: PMC10158593
- DOI: 10.1162/nol_a_00046
Moving From Bilingual Traits to States: Understanding Cognition and Language Processing Through Moment-to-Moment Variation
Abstract
The study of how bilingualism is linked to cognitive processing, including executive functioning, has historically focused on comparing bilinguals to monolinguals across a range of tasks. These group comparisons presume to capture relatively stable cognitive traits and have revealed important insights about the architecture of the language processing system that could not have been gleaned from studying monolinguals alone. However, there are drawbacks to using a group-comparison, or Traits, approach. In this theoretical review, we outline some limitations of treating executive functions as stable traits and of treating bilinguals as a uniform group when compared to monolinguals. To build on what we have learned from group comparisons, we advocate for an emerging complementary approach to the question of cognition and bilingualism. Using an approach that compares bilinguals to themselves under different linguistic or cognitive contexts allows researchers to ask questions about how language and cognitive processes interact based on dynamically fluctuating cognitive and neural states. A States approach, which has already been used by bilingualism researchers, allows for cause-and-effect hypotheses and shifts our focus from questions of group differences to questions of how varied linguistic environments influence cognitive operations in the moment and how fluctuations in cognitive engagement impact language processing.
Keywords: bilingualism; cognitive control; executive function; individual differences; language processing.
© 2021 Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Conflict of interest statement
Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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