Prospective memory in bilinguals and monolinguals: ERP and behavioural correlates of prospective processing in bilinguals
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Prospective memory Focality Monitoring ERP Bilingualism Language control Bilingual experience N300 P3b
Date
2021-12-28Referencia bibliográfica
Cristina López-Rojas... [et al.]. Prospective memory in bilinguals and monolinguals: ERP and behavioural correlates of prospective processing in bilinguals, Brain and Language, Volume 225, 2022, 105059, ISSN 0093-934X, [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bandl.2021.105059]
Patrocinador
Spanish Government FPU17/03378; Junta de Andalucia PSI 2017-89324-C2-2-P PGC2018-093786-B-I00 30B51801 A-CTS-111-UGR18/B-CTS-384-UGR20/P20_00107Résumé
Prospective memory (PM) allows us to form intentions and execute them in the future. Successful retrieval of
prospective intentions depends on adequate context monitoring and disengagement from the ongoing task. These
processes are also central in predicting incoming language information and guiding language production in
bilinguals. We investigated if different bilingual experiences (early/late bilinguals, monolinguals) modulate
performance in PM tasks that varied in attentional requirements (focal vs. non-focal). Behavioural and eventrelated
potential (ERP) results indicated that early bilinguals differed from late bilinguals and monolinguals in
how they performed the prospective task. Specifically, they showed larger differences between the ongoing
activity and the prospective task in the N300 and P3b components when performing the more difficult non-focal
PM task, indicating that they engaged in monitoring/updating to adapt to the task’s demands. These differences
were not observed in late bilinguals and monolinguals, suggesting that prospective processing is dependent on
the bilingual experience.