Relationship between language dominance and stimulus-stimulus or stimulus-response inhibition in Uyghur-Chinese bilinguals with an investigation of speed-accuracy trade-offs

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Abstract

The effect of bilingualism on inhibition control is increasingly under ongoing exploration. The present study primarily investigated the effect of within bilingual factors (i.e., dominance types of Uyghur-Chinese bilinguals) on a Stimulus-Stimulus task (Flanker) and a Stimulus-Response task (Simon). We also compared the bilinguals’ performance on each type of cognitive control task in respect to a possible trade-off between speed and accuracy. The findings showed no explicit differences on performance in response time or accuracy among balanced, L1-dominant and L2-dominant bilinguals but balanced bilinguals demonstrated a significant speed-accuracy trade-off in the overall context switching between non-conflict and conflict trials in both cognitive control tasks where monitoring process is highly demanded. Additionally, all bilinguals across all language dominance types showed a trade-off strategy in inhibition during a Stimulus-Stimulus conflict (flanker task). This evidence indicates that the differences of within bilinguals in cognitive control could lie in the monitoring process, while for all bilinguals, inhibition during a Stimulus-Stimulus conflict could be a major component in the mechanism of bilingual language processing.

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APA

Wu, R., Struys, E., & Lochtman, K. (2019). Relationship between language dominance and stimulus-stimulus or stimulus-response inhibition in Uyghur-Chinese bilinguals with an investigation of speed-accuracy trade-offs. Behavioral Sciences, 9(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/bs9040041

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