Abstract
Cross-linguistic activation is unavoidable in bilinguals and they require language control to manage it. In this study, it is posited that Relative Language Distance (RLD; the extent of lexical feature-similarity between bilinguals’ languages) can affect the extent of cross-linguistic activation and hence influence bilingual language control. This was investigated via an er-fMRI word-translation task on three similar bilingual groups but with varying RLDs: Dutch-English (low-RLD), Hindi-English (intermediate-RLD) and Cantonese-English (high-RLD). Cross-linguistic conflict and the degree of conflict monitoring/control necessary to manage it were expected to increase with decreasing RLD across groups and be appropriately reflected in the activity of conflict monitoring/control neural regions, such as the ACC (anterior cingulate cortex). Analysis revealed a significantly differential ACC response across the groups, reflecting its adaptation to differential conflict monitoring/control demands generated by RLD. The findings provide emerging evidence for RLD as a dimension of bilingualism impacting bilingual language control processes and neurobiology.
Footnotes
Declaration of interest The author declares that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.