It Takes a Village: Using Network Science to Identify the Effect of Individual Differences in Bilingual Experience for Theory of Mind
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24745Date
2022-04-09Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
An increasing amount of research has examined the effects of bilingualism on performance
in theory of mind (ToM) tasks. Bilinguals outperform monolinguals in ToM when comparing groups.
However, it is unclear what aspects of the bilingual experience contribute to this effect in a dynamic
construct like ToM. To date, bilingualism has been conceptualized as a dichotic skill that is distinct
from monolingualism, obscuring nuances in the degree that different bilingual experience affects
cognition. The current study used a combination of network science, cognitive, and linguistic
behavioral measurements to explore the factors that influence perspective-taking ToM based on
participants’ current and previous experience with language, as well as their family networks’
experience with language. The results suggest that some aspects of the bilingual experience predict
task performance, but not others, and these predictors align with the two-system theory of ToM.
Overall, the findings provide evidence for the extent to which individual differences in bilingualism
are related to different cognitive outcomes.
Publisher
MDPICitation
Navarro, DeLuca V, Rossi E. It Takes a Village: Using Network Science to Identify the Effect of Individual Differences in Bilingual Experience for Theory of Mind. Brain Sciences. 2022;12(4)Metadata
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