Learning a second language after age 30 keeps your brain young
Research output: Contribution to conference › Poster
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2018. Poster session presented at CoNSALL: Cognitive Neuroscience of Second and Artificial Language Learning, United Kingdom.
Research output: Contribution to conference › Poster
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TY - CONF
T1 - Learning a second language after age 30 keeps your brain young
AU - O'Riordan, Caitlin-Ellen
AU - Mills, Debra
AU - Neofytou, Elena
AU - Roch, Natalie
PY - 2018/9/21
Y1 - 2018/9/21
N2 - Research suggests that bilingualism can slow the rate ofcognitive decline in older adults and even delay the onset ofsymptoms of dementia1. Older adult bilinguals outperformmonolinguals on a range of executive functioning tasks includinginhibitory control, task switching, and working memory2. This isknown as the “bilingual advantage”. According to Ellen Bialystok,the suppression of one language when using the otherstrengthens frontal lobe functioning thus resulting in a cognitiveadvantage for bilinguals2.However, the bilingual advantage has not been observed inWelsh-English adults over 65 using behavioural tasks3. A possibleexplanation is that for life-long balanced bilinguals switchingbetween languages is effortless and does not “exercise” thefrontal lobe functioning needed to demonstrate a bilingualadvantage.The present study tested the hypothesis that learning Welsh asan adult would facilitate a bilingual advantage later in life, i.e.after age 65, IF the adult Welsh learners:• Became highly proficient in Welsh• Used Welsh frequently in their daily lives – thus requiringEnglish, the dominant first language, to be suppressed.
AB - Research suggests that bilingualism can slow the rate ofcognitive decline in older adults and even delay the onset ofsymptoms of dementia1. Older adult bilinguals outperformmonolinguals on a range of executive functioning tasks includinginhibitory control, task switching, and working memory2. This isknown as the “bilingual advantage”. According to Ellen Bialystok,the suppression of one language when using the otherstrengthens frontal lobe functioning thus resulting in a cognitiveadvantage for bilinguals2.However, the bilingual advantage has not been observed inWelsh-English adults over 65 using behavioural tasks3. A possibleexplanation is that for life-long balanced bilinguals switchingbetween languages is effortless and does not “exercise” thefrontal lobe functioning needed to demonstrate a bilingualadvantage.The present study tested the hypothesis that learning Welsh asan adult would facilitate a bilingual advantage later in life, i.e.after age 65, IF the adult Welsh learners:• Became highly proficient in Welsh• Used Welsh frequently in their daily lives – thus requiringEnglish, the dominant first language, to be suppressed.
KW - bilingualism
KW - Event-related potentials (ERP)
M3 - Poster
T2 - CoNSALL: Cognitive Neuroscience of Second and Artificial Language Learning
Y2 - 21 September 2018 through 23 September 2018
ER -