Abstract :
This study investigated the possibility that lifelong bilingualism may lead to enhanced efficiency in the ability to shift between
mental sets. We compared the performance of monolingual and fluent bilingual college students in a task-switching paradigm.
Bilinguals incurred reduced switching costs in the task-switching paradigm when compared with monolinguals, suggesting
that lifelong experience in switching between languages may contribute to increased efficiency in the ability to shift flexibly
between mental sets. On the other hand, bilinguals did not differ from monolinguals in the differential cost of performing
mixed-task as opposed to single-task blocks. Together, these results indicate that bilingual advantages in executive function
most likely extend beyond inhibition of competing responses, and encompass flexible mental shifting as well.