Does the frequency of cultural switching modulate bilinguals’ performance on executive functions tasks? A study of highly proficient bicultural-bilinguals

Aims and Objectives: This study investigates how bicultural switching could influence cognitive performance on Executive Functions tasks among bicultural-bilinguals. Methodology: Study 1 (n = 233) integrates self-report questionnaire data on cultural and language behaviour with a priming experiment,...

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Main Authors: Xie, Wenhan, Ng, Bee Chin
Other Authors: School of Humanities
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/182469
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1824692025-02-04T02:20:06Z Does the frequency of cultural switching modulate bilinguals’ performance on executive functions tasks? A study of highly proficient bicultural-bilinguals Xie, Wenhan Ng, Bee Chin School of Humanities Arts and Humanities Biculturalism Bilingualism Aims and Objectives: This study investigates how bicultural switching could influence cognitive performance on Executive Functions tasks among bicultural-bilinguals. Methodology: Study 1 (n = 233) integrates self-report questionnaire data on cultural and language behaviour with a priming experiment, providing empirical evidence of young adult bilinguals’ ability to shift between multiple cultures. Study 2 (n = 48) explores the effect of cultural switching frequency on young adult bicultural bilinguals’ performance on tests for interference and inhibition control, set-shifting ability, and attention. Data and Analysis: Study 1: A repeated measures ANOVA was conducted to determine the effect of different primes on participant’s ratings. We ran a two-way mixed ANOVA to ascertain the effect of interlocutors (Grandparents/relatives, Parents, Siblings, Peers/co-workers, Social media) on behaviour (Cultural, Language). Study 2: A one-way ANOVA was conducted on Simon, Flanker, and Wisconsin Card Sort tasks (WCST). Each of the three attention network components was analysed using a 2 (trial-type, within-subjects) × 2 (Switching Group, between-groups) mixed-ANOVA for the Attention Network task. Findings: Study 1: Participants who alternate frequently between cultural frames made a clearer distinction between Western primes than those who switched between cultural frames less, suggesting that the frequency of cultural switching could impact cognition. Study 2: Bicultural bilinguals who switched between cultural frames frequently resolved stimulus-response conflict significantly faster in the Flanker task, made fewer mistakes within each sorting block in the WCST, and had a smaller conflict effect compared to infrequent switchers in the Attention Network Task. Significance: This study examines the effects of bicultural switching on Executive Functions of highly proficient bicultural bilinguals, highlighting it as a potential confound in bilingual research. Bicultural switching effects on interference and inhibition-control persist even in participants at the developmental peak of their cognitive processing capabilities after controlling for a plethora of socio-linguistic variables. Our research highlights how this understudied aspect of multiculturalism may have broad implications for bilingual research in Executive Functions. 2025-02-04T02:20:06Z 2025-02-04T02:20:06Z 2024 Journal Article Xie, W. & Ng, B. C. (2024). Does the frequency of cultural switching modulate bilinguals’ performance on executive functions tasks? A study of highly proficient bicultural-bilinguals. International Journal of Bilingualism, 1-26. https://dx.doi.org/10.1177/13670069241292540 1367-0069 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/182469 10.1177/13670069241292540 2-s2.0-85210157409 1 26 en International Journal of Bilingualism © 2024 The Author(s). All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Arts and Humanities
Biculturalism
Bilingualism
spellingShingle Arts and Humanities
Biculturalism
Bilingualism
Xie, Wenhan
Ng, Bee Chin
Does the frequency of cultural switching modulate bilinguals’ performance on executive functions tasks? A study of highly proficient bicultural-bilinguals
description Aims and Objectives: This study investigates how bicultural switching could influence cognitive performance on Executive Functions tasks among bicultural-bilinguals. Methodology: Study 1 (n = 233) integrates self-report questionnaire data on cultural and language behaviour with a priming experiment, providing empirical evidence of young adult bilinguals’ ability to shift between multiple cultures. Study 2 (n = 48) explores the effect of cultural switching frequency on young adult bicultural bilinguals’ performance on tests for interference and inhibition control, set-shifting ability, and attention. Data and Analysis: Study 1: A repeated measures ANOVA was conducted to determine the effect of different primes on participant’s ratings. We ran a two-way mixed ANOVA to ascertain the effect of interlocutors (Grandparents/relatives, Parents, Siblings, Peers/co-workers, Social media) on behaviour (Cultural, Language). Study 2: A one-way ANOVA was conducted on Simon, Flanker, and Wisconsin Card Sort tasks (WCST). Each of the three attention network components was analysed using a 2 (trial-type, within-subjects) × 2 (Switching Group, between-groups) mixed-ANOVA for the Attention Network task. Findings: Study 1: Participants who alternate frequently between cultural frames made a clearer distinction between Western primes than those who switched between cultural frames less, suggesting that the frequency of cultural switching could impact cognition. Study 2: Bicultural bilinguals who switched between cultural frames frequently resolved stimulus-response conflict significantly faster in the Flanker task, made fewer mistakes within each sorting block in the WCST, and had a smaller conflict effect compared to infrequent switchers in the Attention Network Task. Significance: This study examines the effects of bicultural switching on Executive Functions of highly proficient bicultural bilinguals, highlighting it as a potential confound in bilingual research. Bicultural switching effects on interference and inhibition-control persist even in participants at the developmental peak of their cognitive processing capabilities after controlling for a plethora of socio-linguistic variables. Our research highlights how this understudied aspect of multiculturalism may have broad implications for bilingual research in Executive Functions.
author2 School of Humanities
author_facet School of Humanities
Xie, Wenhan
Ng, Bee Chin
format Article
author Xie, Wenhan
Ng, Bee Chin
author_sort Xie, Wenhan
title Does the frequency of cultural switching modulate bilinguals’ performance on executive functions tasks? A study of highly proficient bicultural-bilinguals
title_short Does the frequency of cultural switching modulate bilinguals’ performance on executive functions tasks? A study of highly proficient bicultural-bilinguals
title_full Does the frequency of cultural switching modulate bilinguals’ performance on executive functions tasks? A study of highly proficient bicultural-bilinguals
title_fullStr Does the frequency of cultural switching modulate bilinguals’ performance on executive functions tasks? A study of highly proficient bicultural-bilinguals
title_full_unstemmed Does the frequency of cultural switching modulate bilinguals’ performance on executive functions tasks? A study of highly proficient bicultural-bilinguals
title_sort does the frequency of cultural switching modulate bilinguals’ performance on executive functions tasks? a study of highly proficient bicultural-bilinguals
publishDate 2025
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/182469
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