The Effect of Cognates on Cognitive Control in Late Sequential Multilinguals: A Bilingual Advantage?

The Effect of Cognates on Cognitive Control in Late Sequential Multilinguals: A Bilingual Advantage? is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.3390/BS9030025
P932PMC publication ID6466587
P698PubMed publication ID30857198

P2093author name stringKatja Lochtman
Jorik Fidler
P2860cites workWord recognition in child second language learners: Evidence from cognates and false friends.Q51011974
Cognitive control and word recognition speed influence the Stroop effect in bilingualsQ59260999
Interdimensional interference in the Stroop effect: uncovering the cognitive and neural anatomy of attentionQ73061662
Phonology in the bilingual Stroop effectQ81028296
Ageing and bilingualism: absence of a "bilingual advantage" in stroop interference in a nonimmigrant sampleQ84971333
The unity and diversity of executive functions and their contributions to complex "Frontal Lobe" tasks: a latent variable analysisQ28143881
There is no coherent evidence for a bilingual advantage in executive processingQ28284656
Cognitive control and lexical access in younger and older bilingualsQ28286319
Distinct cortical areas associated with native and second languagesQ34431950
Language control in the bilingual brain.Q34536348
Balanced bilingualism and early age of second language acquisition as the underlying mechanisms of a bilingual executive control advantage: why variations in bilingual experiences matterQ35124170
Immature frontal lobe contributions to cognitive control in children: evidence from fMRI.Q35951600
Attention and facilitation: converging information versus inadvertent reading in Stroop task performanceQ38375402
Does bilingualism change native-language reading? Cognate effects in a sentence context.Q38380692
Orthographic processing in balanced bilingual children: Cross-language evidence from cognates and false friendsQ38402154
Recognizing cognates and interlingual homographs: effects of code similarity in language-specific and generalized lexical decisionQ38419636
Bilingualism and adult differences in inhibitory mechanisms: evidence from a bilingual stroop taskQ38422973
The cognate facilitation effect: implications for models of lexical accessQ38443391
A review of control processes and their locus in language switchingQ38444887
On the role of competing word units in visual word recognition: the neighborhood frequency effectQ38483587
Neural mechanisms of transient and sustained cognitive control during task switchingQ48223806
Shared and separate systems in bilingual language processing: converging evidence from eyetracking and brain imagingQ48273164
Bilingualism and age are continuous variables that influence executive functionQ48558871
P275copyright licenseCreative Commons Attribution 4.0 InternationalQ20007257
P6216copyright statuscopyrightedQ50423863
P433issue3
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P921main subjectmultilingualismQ30081
German as a foreign languageQ1201953
P304page(s)25
P577publication date2019-03-08
P1433published inBehavioral sciences (Basel, Switzerland)Q27724027
P1476titleThe Effect of Cognates on Cognitive Control in Late Sequential Multilinguals: A Bilingual Advantage?
P478volume9

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