z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
A GENERAL OVERVIEW ON THE EFFECT OF BILINGUALISM ON EXECUTIVE FUNCTION SKILLS IN CHILDREN: INCONSISTENT RESULTS AND MODERATOR FACTORS
Author(s) -
İki Dillilik,
Öz Bu,
Ve Tek Dilli,
Gözden Geçirme,
Çalışmasına Dahil,
Edilen Araştırmalara,
İlişkin Özet,
Tablo No,
Araştırma Katılımcılar,
Katılımcıların Yaş,
Aralığı Kullanılan,
Görev Sonuç
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
nesne psikoloji dergisi
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2147-6489
DOI - 10.7816/nesne-09-21-13
Subject(s) - moderation , neuroscience of multilingualism , psychology , executive functions , cognitive psychology , function (biology) , developmental psychology , working memory , cognition , social psychology , evolutionary biology , neuroscience , biology
In this study, we reviewed recent studies comparing executive function performance of bi and monolingual children. In that respect, we came across 27 studies. Most of these studies report “partial” executive function advantage for bilingual children (i.e., a bilingual advantage is reported only for some tasks within the same study). In this regard, we examined in detail whether the executive function advantage in bilingual children is general or this advantage appears only in specific executive function tasks. Upon this evaluation, we observed that the bilingual advantage is not specific to a particular executive function paradigm or executive function task classification. To better explain these inconsistencies, we assessed and discussed the moderator factors (i.e., second language age of acquisition, language proficiency, language exposure, language interactional context, minority status, and socioeconomic status) that potentially could affect the outcome of studies examining the executive function skills of bilingual children. We concluded that the bilingual advantage on executive functions is linked to the general executive function system rather than a single executive function task; however, these effects cannot consistently be demonstrated due to the ignored moderator factors. Thus, to obtain more precise results, we offered suggestions for future studies that will compare bi and monolingual children on executive function performance. Keywords Bilingualism, childhood period, executive functions

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here