ABSTRACT

The Bilingual Advantage in Executive Functioning Hypothesis is a ground-breaking book that explores one of the liveliest debates in bilingualism and cognitive psychology. It examines the hypothesis that using two languages leads to the enhancement of domain-general executive functioning (EF) and argues that either the bilingual advantage does not exist or is restricted to very specific circumstances. The conclusion extends to situations where EF is referred to as self-control, self-regulation, self-discipline, attention-control, impulse control, inhibitory control, cognitive control, and willpower.

The book explores the evolving core assumptions underlying the bilingual advantage hypothesis, framing the debate within the broader context of a replication crisis. It provides a critical review of seminal studies and meta-analyses and argues that the empirical evidence does not support a bilingual advantage on EF that is distinguishable from zero. Part I lays the foundation for the debate, providing the background needed to understand the state-of-the-art research on EF and bilingual language control. The next part then provides a detailed review of the empirical evidence triggering each iteration of the hypothesis. This includes new data that compares tests of the bilingual advantage hypothesis based on self-reports of cognitive control to performance-based measures of EF. A third theoretical part considers several explanations for why managing two languages may not enhance aspects of domain-general cognition.

This is essential reading for students and scholars in bilingualism, psychology, linguistics, languages, speech and hearing science, and related fields. It also serves as an excellent primary source for graduate courses on the bilingual advantage debate, and is useful for advanced undergraduate courses in psycholinguistics, cognition or bilingualism.

part II|126 pages

The Debate Emerges

chapter 7|8 pages

Shifting to a Monitoring Account

chapter 8|12 pages

Shifting to an Executive Attention Account

chapter 9|8 pages

Accounts that Emphasize “Adaptations”

chapter 10|25 pages

The Special Role of Language Switching

chapter 11|15 pages

The March of the Mighty Meta-Analyses

chapter 13|11 pages

Mega-Data and Mega-Control

A Small Chapter on Big Data and Extreme Bilinguals

part III|75 pages

Reconstruction

chapter 17|21 pages

In Defense of the Hypothesis

And a Rebuttal

chapter 20|16 pages

Is There an Advantage? How Should We Decide?

Why Might There be No Advantage?