The effect of domain-general inhibition-related training on language switching: An ERP study

•Inhibition training could increase the efficiency of language switching.•Inhibition may play a key role during the lexical selection response phase.•The present study makes new and important supplementary support for IC model. Previous studies have demonstrated that inhibitory control ability could...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cognition 2016-01, Vol.146, p.264-276
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Huanhuan, Liang, Lijuan, Dunlap, Susan, Fan, Ning, Chen, Baoguo
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container_title Cognition
container_volume 146
creator Liu, Huanhuan
Liang, Lijuan
Dunlap, Susan
Fan, Ning
Chen, Baoguo
description •Inhibition training could increase the efficiency of language switching.•Inhibition may play a key role during the lexical selection response phase.•The present study makes new and important supplementary support for IC model. Previous studies have demonstrated that inhibitory control ability could be improved by training, and the Inhibitory Control (IC) Model implies that enhanced domain-general inhibition may elicit certain changes in language switch costs. In the present study, we aimed to examine the effects of domain-general inhibition training on performance in a language switching task, including which phase of domain-general inhibitory control benefits from training during an overt picture naming task in L1 and L2, using the event-related brain potentials (ERPs). Results showed that the language switch costs of bilinguals with high inhibitory control (high-IC) were symmetrical in both pretest and posttest, and those of bilinguals with low inhibitory control (low-IC) were asymmetrical in the pretest, but symmetrical in the posttest. Moreover, the high-IC group showed a larger LPC (late positive component) for L2 switch trials than for L1 trials in both pretest and posttest. In contrast, the low-IC group only exhibited a similar pattern of LPC in the posttest, but not in the pretest. These results indicate that inhibition training could increase the efficiency of language switching, and inhibitory control may play a key role during the lexical selection response phase. Overall, the present study is the first one to provide electrophysiological evidence for individual differences in the domain-general inhibition impact on language switching performance in low-proficient bilinguals.
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Previous studies have demonstrated that inhibitory control ability could be improved by training, and the Inhibitory Control (IC) Model implies that enhanced domain-general inhibition may elicit certain changes in language switch costs. In the present study, we aimed to examine the effects of domain-general inhibition training on performance in a language switching task, including which phase of domain-general inhibitory control benefits from training during an overt picture naming task in L1 and L2, using the event-related brain potentials (ERPs). Results showed that the language switch costs of bilinguals with high inhibitory control (high-IC) were symmetrical in both pretest and posttest, and those of bilinguals with low inhibitory control (low-IC) were asymmetrical in the pretest, but symmetrical in the posttest. Moreover, the high-IC group showed a larger LPC (late positive component) for L2 switch trials than for L1 trials in both pretest and posttest. In contrast, the low-IC group only exhibited a similar pattern of LPC in the posttest, but not in the pretest. These results indicate that inhibition training could increase the efficiency of language switching, and inhibitory control may play a key role during the lexical selection response phase. 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In contrast, the low-IC group only exhibited a similar pattern of LPC in the posttest, but not in the pretest. These results indicate that inhibition training could increase the efficiency of language switching, and inhibitory control may play a key role during the lexical selection response phase. 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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Evoked Potentials - physiology
Executive Function - physiology
Female
Humans
Inhibition (Psychology)
Inhibitory control training
Language switching
LPC
Male
Multilingualism
Switch costs
Young Adult
title The effect of domain-general inhibition-related training on language switching: An ERP study
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