dc.description.abstract | Bilingualism has been associated with increases in compensatory mechanisms to age-related neurocognitive
decline thus delaying dementia symptom onset and leading to a more favorable trajectory of neurocognitive
aging. However, most research to date has examined bilingualism-induced effects on neurocognition within older
age ranges or young adults – with middle-aged individuals typically not being a population of interest.
Furthermore, bilingualism is often treated as a dichotomous variable, despite it being a heterogeneous experience
on an individual level. In the present study, we employed diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) to examine whether
bilingualism, and the degree of engagement in bilingual experience, modulates the nature or rate of white matter
decline associated with aging. DTI data and language history data were collected from a cohort of monolingual
and bilingual individuals spanning a wide age range. Two separate analyses were run. First, generalized additive
models were run on matched monolingual and bilingual samples, examining effects of age on the trajectory of
white matter integrity and how bilingualism modulates this effect. This analysis revealed a significant effect of
age within the monolingual group for fractional anisotropy values in the right superior longitudinal fasciculus.
However, the age effect within the bilingual group was not significant, indicating a faster decline in white matter
integrity within the monolingual cohort. Second, general linear models were run on the entire participant
sample, examining an interaction between age and degree of bilingual engagement on white matter integrity.
Results from this analysis indicate that increased engagement in bilingual language use across the lifespan
correlates with a slower decline in white matter integrity with age. Together these results indicate bilingualism,
and specifically degree of bilingual engagement, impacts the trajectory of age-related decline in white matter
integrity across the lifespan. | en_US |