Cognitive efficiency and expertise-dependent automaticity in the working memory performance of bilinguals
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/37120Date
2025-05-12Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
The concepts of cognitive efficiency (CE) and expertise-dependent automaticity are central to the understanding
of cognitive adaptations related to bilingual experiences. This study examined their behavioral manifestations in
bilingual young adults by manipulating the cognitive load of a working memory task; the possibility to
manipulate the difficulty of a cognitive task is necessary to observe behavioral outcomes associated with CE and
automaticity. To this end, participants completed an n-back task ranging in difficulty from 0-back to 3-back, with
the 3-back condition being commonly recognized as being a highly cognitively demanding one. We aimed to
determine whether degree of bilingual experience could predict performance outcomes – accuracy, reaction
times, and the speed/accuracy tradeoff – reflecting bilingualism’s putative dynamic impact on CE and automaticity in working memory. The results showed a positive relationship between degree of bilingual experience
and working memory performance, particularly when the task-induced cognitive load increased. More experienced bilinguals demonstrated a smaller decline in performance when task difficulty intensified, a behavioral
manifestation compatible with increased CE. Additionally, a relationship with expertise-dependent automaticity
emerged, with the speed/accuracy tradeoff trajectory unfolding differentially across varying task difficulties at
different degrees of bilingual experience.
Publisher
ElsevierCitation
Gallo, Terekhina, Aboutalebi, Shtyrov, Myachykov. Cognitive efficiency and expertise-dependent automaticity in the working memory performance of bilinguals. Brain and Cognition. 2025Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2025 The Author(s)