The impact of task difficulty and bilingual features on the aging process of response inhibition in English-Mandarin bilinguals.

The current study investigated age-related declines in prepotent response inhibition in bilinguals, and the impact of factors such as task difficulty, degree of bilingualism and extent of language dominance on the decay process. Both young and old English-Mandarin bilinguals were recruited in the st...

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Main Author: Low, Joel Jia Wei
Other Authors: Qu Li
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2012
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/48423
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-484232019-12-10T14:07:24Z The impact of task difficulty and bilingual features on the aging process of response inhibition in English-Mandarin bilinguals. Low, Joel Jia Wei Qu Li School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology The current study investigated age-related declines in prepotent response inhibition in bilinguals, and the impact of factors such as task difficulty, degree of bilingualism and extent of language dominance on the decay process. Both young and old English-Mandarin bilinguals were recruited in the study. Using a 2 (Age: young adults, older adults) X 2 (Go/No-Go conditions: high impulsive, standard impulsive) mixed factorial design, the study varied the task difficulty of the Go/No-Go task. The study found that age was positively associated with prepotent response inhibition in bilinguals regardless of task difficulty, even after controlling for participants’ age-related generalized slowing in processing speed. Hence, the findings suggest that bilingualism may not only reduce but also reverse the age-related decay of prepotent response inhibition in bilinguals. Furthermore, a positive relationship between the degree of bilingualism and prepotent response inhibition was found but only for older bilingual adults in the high conflict monitoring condition. On the other hand, no relationship was observed between the extent of language dominance and prepotent response inhibition in bilinguals. Together, the current study illustrated the aging process of prepotent response inhibition in a bilingual population, and demonstrated the impact of factors such as task difficulty, degree of bilingualism, and extent of language dominance on this process. Bachelor of Arts 2012-04-18T06:44:14Z 2012-04-18T06:44:14Z 2012 2012 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/48423 en Nanyang Technological University 66 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
Low, Joel Jia Wei
The impact of task difficulty and bilingual features on the aging process of response inhibition in English-Mandarin bilinguals.
description The current study investigated age-related declines in prepotent response inhibition in bilinguals, and the impact of factors such as task difficulty, degree of bilingualism and extent of language dominance on the decay process. Both young and old English-Mandarin bilinguals were recruited in the study. Using a 2 (Age: young adults, older adults) X 2 (Go/No-Go conditions: high impulsive, standard impulsive) mixed factorial design, the study varied the task difficulty of the Go/No-Go task. The study found that age was positively associated with prepotent response inhibition in bilinguals regardless of task difficulty, even after controlling for participants’ age-related generalized slowing in processing speed. Hence, the findings suggest that bilingualism may not only reduce but also reverse the age-related decay of prepotent response inhibition in bilinguals. Furthermore, a positive relationship between the degree of bilingualism and prepotent response inhibition was found but only for older bilingual adults in the high conflict monitoring condition. On the other hand, no relationship was observed between the extent of language dominance and prepotent response inhibition in bilinguals. Together, the current study illustrated the aging process of prepotent response inhibition in a bilingual population, and demonstrated the impact of factors such as task difficulty, degree of bilingualism, and extent of language dominance on this process.
author2 Qu Li
author_facet Qu Li
Low, Joel Jia Wei
format Final Year Project
author Low, Joel Jia Wei
author_sort Low, Joel Jia Wei
title The impact of task difficulty and bilingual features on the aging process of response inhibition in English-Mandarin bilinguals.
title_short The impact of task difficulty and bilingual features on the aging process of response inhibition in English-Mandarin bilinguals.
title_full The impact of task difficulty and bilingual features on the aging process of response inhibition in English-Mandarin bilinguals.
title_fullStr The impact of task difficulty and bilingual features on the aging process of response inhibition in English-Mandarin bilinguals.
title_full_unstemmed The impact of task difficulty and bilingual features on the aging process of response inhibition in English-Mandarin bilinguals.
title_sort impact of task difficulty and bilingual features on the aging process of response inhibition in english-mandarin bilinguals.
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/48423
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