The effect of biculturalism on executive functions

Much debate in the field of bilingualism has centred around a bilingual’s advantage in Executive Functions (For a recent review, see Lehtonen et al., 2018). In light of recent conflicting evidence regarding the premise of a bilingual advantage, scholars have begun to scrutinize possible variables an...

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Main Author: Xie, Wenhan
Other Authors: Ng Bee Chin
Format: Thesis-Master by Research
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137189
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-137189
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::Linguistics
spellingShingle Humanities::Linguistics
Xie, Wenhan
The effect of biculturalism on executive functions
description Much debate in the field of bilingualism has centred around a bilingual’s advantage in Executive Functions (For a recent review, see Lehtonen et al., 2018). In light of recent conflicting evidence regarding the premise of a bilingual advantage, scholars have begun to scrutinize possible variables and confounds arising from differences in the broader social and interactional environment (de Bruin, 2019). While variables such as proficiency, immigration, and age of acquisition have received much attention over the years, there is still a paucity of research into culture as a variable exerting an effect on bilingualism. To the best of our knowledge, the few studies considering the impact of culture on bilingual’s Executives Functions group participants on the macro-level culture that is commonly associated with their nationality (e.g. Samuel, Roehr-Brackin, Pak,& Kim, 2018; Tran, Arredondo,& Yoshida, 2015). Yet, this does not capture a sufficiently nuanced perspective of the cultural diversity among bilingual populations (Grosjean, 2015). This thesis is the first to explore the effects of biculturalism on Executive Functions among bicultural-bilinguals. Study 1 surveyed 252 bilingual Singaporean young adults to provide an overview of how they viewed language and their ethnic cultural identities. The results show that the majority of Singaporean young adults (71.7%) were bicultural. The likelihood of biculturalism was predicted by their ethnic language proficiency and bilingual status (Balanced vs. Unbalanced). To augment the self-report data in the first study, Study 2 integrates self-report questionnaire data on cultural and language behaviour with a priming experiment (cultural frame switching, adapted from Hong, Morris, Chiu,& Benet-Martinez,2000) to provide empirical evidence of bilingual Singaporean young adults ability to switch between cultural frames. 233 participants from Study 1 continued with this follow up study, and the results suggest that Singaporean young adults were not only bicultural but were also able to switch between different cultures when primed with Western and ethnic cultural primes. Individuals who switched between cultural frames more frequently made a clearer distinction between Western primes than those who switched between cultural frames less frequently, suggesting that cultural primes impact cognition differentially depending on their frequency of switching between cultures. Study 3 explored the effect of cultural switching frequency on 48 young adult bicultural bilinguals’ performance on tests for interference and inhibition-control (Simon and Flanker tasks), set-shifting ability (Wisconsin Card Sort Task), and attention (Attention Network Task). Frequent cultural switchers had an advantage in resolving stimulus-response conflict significantly faster in the Flanker task, were better at maintaining set in the Wisconsin Card Sort Task, and had a smaller CONFLICT effect compared to infrequent switchers in the Attention Network Task. Taken together, this thesis has implications for future studies of bilingual populations, as the bicultural switching effects on interference and inhibition-control persists even after tightly controlling for key socio-linguistic variables including bilingual proficiency, age of acquisition, IQ, socio-economic status and age. Our research underscores the importance of considering socio-cultural variables in future studies examining a bilingual advantage in Executive Functions.
author2 Ng Bee Chin
author_facet Ng Bee Chin
Xie, Wenhan
format Thesis-Master by Research
author Xie, Wenhan
author_sort Xie, Wenhan
title The effect of biculturalism on executive functions
title_short The effect of biculturalism on executive functions
title_full The effect of biculturalism on executive functions
title_fullStr The effect of biculturalism on executive functions
title_full_unstemmed The effect of biculturalism on executive functions
title_sort effect of biculturalism on executive functions
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137189
_version_ 1683494561814413312
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1371892020-10-28T08:29:18Z The effect of biculturalism on executive functions Xie, Wenhan Ng Bee Chin School of Humanities mbcng@ntu.edu.sg Humanities::Linguistics Much debate in the field of bilingualism has centred around a bilingual’s advantage in Executive Functions (For a recent review, see Lehtonen et al., 2018). In light of recent conflicting evidence regarding the premise of a bilingual advantage, scholars have begun to scrutinize possible variables and confounds arising from differences in the broader social and interactional environment (de Bruin, 2019). While variables such as proficiency, immigration, and age of acquisition have received much attention over the years, there is still a paucity of research into culture as a variable exerting an effect on bilingualism. To the best of our knowledge, the few studies considering the impact of culture on bilingual’s Executives Functions group participants on the macro-level culture that is commonly associated with their nationality (e.g. Samuel, Roehr-Brackin, Pak,& Kim, 2018; Tran, Arredondo,& Yoshida, 2015). Yet, this does not capture a sufficiently nuanced perspective of the cultural diversity among bilingual populations (Grosjean, 2015). This thesis is the first to explore the effects of biculturalism on Executive Functions among bicultural-bilinguals. Study 1 surveyed 252 bilingual Singaporean young adults to provide an overview of how they viewed language and their ethnic cultural identities. The results show that the majority of Singaporean young adults (71.7%) were bicultural. The likelihood of biculturalism was predicted by their ethnic language proficiency and bilingual status (Balanced vs. Unbalanced). To augment the self-report data in the first study, Study 2 integrates self-report questionnaire data on cultural and language behaviour with a priming experiment (cultural frame switching, adapted from Hong, Morris, Chiu,& Benet-Martinez,2000) to provide empirical evidence of bilingual Singaporean young adults ability to switch between cultural frames. 233 participants from Study 1 continued with this follow up study, and the results suggest that Singaporean young adults were not only bicultural but were also able to switch between different cultures when primed with Western and ethnic cultural primes. Individuals who switched between cultural frames more frequently made a clearer distinction between Western primes than those who switched between cultural frames less frequently, suggesting that cultural primes impact cognition differentially depending on their frequency of switching between cultures. Study 3 explored the effect of cultural switching frequency on 48 young adult bicultural bilinguals’ performance on tests for interference and inhibition-control (Simon and Flanker tasks), set-shifting ability (Wisconsin Card Sort Task), and attention (Attention Network Task). Frequent cultural switchers had an advantage in resolving stimulus-response conflict significantly faster in the Flanker task, were better at maintaining set in the Wisconsin Card Sort Task, and had a smaller CONFLICT effect compared to infrequent switchers in the Attention Network Task. Taken together, this thesis has implications for future studies of bilingual populations, as the bicultural switching effects on interference and inhibition-control persists even after tightly controlling for key socio-linguistic variables including bilingual proficiency, age of acquisition, IQ, socio-economic status and age. Our research underscores the importance of considering socio-cultural variables in future studies examining a bilingual advantage in Executive Functions. Master of Arts 2020-03-05T08:13:51Z 2020-03-05T08:13:51Z 2019 Thesis-Master by Research Xie, W. (2019). The effect of biculturalism on executive functions. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137189 10.32657/10356/137189 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University