Bi-multilingual Language Engagement Shapes the Brain’s Functional Connectivity: An Aging Study on Resting State Brain Rhythms Correlated to Executive Functions
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30050Date
2023-05-12Type
MastergradsoppgaveMaster thesis
Author
Berglund, GauteAbstract
Bi-multilingualism have been argued to help maintain cognitive functioning in aging through
increased resilience to cognitive decline, known as cognitive reserves (CR). Researchers have
argued that bi-multilingualism imposes unique cognitive demands that can change the brain’s
structural and functional integrity. In order to investigate the effects of multilingual
engagement on cognition, behaviourally and neurologically, resting state (RS) oscillations
were collected through electroencephalography (EEG) in healthy Norwegian-English bi multilingual adults in various stages of adulthood. Additionally, behavioural responses in
terms of reaction times (RT) were captured through a non-linguistic flanker task and further
correlated to RS dynamics. Negative main effects of language experience, operationalised as
multilingual diversity (MLD), were found in the alpha and gamma bands, while also
indications in said frequency bands indicated a flattening effect of age-related cognitive
decline for those with a higher MLD. The MLD did not indicate increased flanker efficiency,
where only older age significantly increased RTs. No correlations were found between the RS
functional connectivity and flanker performance. These findings might suggest that higher
multilingual engagement will slow down the age-related decline in the brain’s functional
connectivity, as this negative main effect of MLD is likely due to no CR trade-off for the
younger participants.
Publisher
UiT Norges arktiske universitetUiT The Arctic University of Norway
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