Unravelling the behavioural and neurophysiological correlates of cognitive control and bilingualism in adults with developmental stuttering. Ghent University
When using one language, bilingual individuals engage repeatedly their cognitive control network to resolve cross-language interference because of the parallel activation of the non-target language. In comparison to monolinguals, this possibly results in structural and functional differences responsible for improved cognitive reserve in older bilingual adults or even individuals with neurodegenerative disorders. In contrast to that improved ...