Executive Processes Underpin the Bilingual Advantage on Phonemic Fluency: Evidence From Analyses of Switching and Clustering

Bilinguals often show a disadvantage in lexical access on verbal fluency tasks wherein the criteria require the production of words from semantic categories. However, the pattern is more heterogeneous for letter (phonemic) fluency wherein the task is to produce words beginning with a given letter. H...

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Published inFrontiers in psychology Vol. 10; p. 1355
Main Authors Marsh, John E, Hansson, Patrik, Sörman, Daniel Eriksson, Ljungberg, Jessica Körning
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 2019
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Summary:Bilinguals often show a disadvantage in lexical access on verbal fluency tasks wherein the criteria require the production of words from semantic categories. However, the pattern is more heterogeneous for letter (phonemic) fluency wherein the task is to produce words beginning with a given letter. Here, bilinguals often outperform monolinguals. One explanation for this is that phonemic fluency, as compared with semantic fluency, is more greatly underpinned by executive processes and that bilinguals exhibit better performance on phonemic fluency due to better executive functions. In this study, we re-analyzed phonemic fluency data from the Betula study, scoring outputs according to two measures that purportedly reflect executive processes: clustering and switching. Consistent with the notion that bilinguals have superior executive processes and that these can be used to offset a bilingual disadvantage in verbal fluency, bilinguals (35-65 years at baseline) demonstrated greater switching and clustering throughout the 15-year study period.
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Reviewed by: Brendan T. Johns, University at Buffalo, United States; Pietro Spataro, Mercatorum University, Italy
This article was submitted to Cognition, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology
Edited by: Bernhard Hommel, Leiden University, Netherlands
ISSN:1664-1078
1664-1078
DOI:10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01355