连接体
人类连接体项目
心理学
执行职能
工作记忆
多语种
认知心理学
认知
功能连接
对比度(视觉)
枕叶
静息状态功能磁共振成像
神经科学
背外侧前额叶皮质
前额叶皮质
任务(项目管理)
听力学
医学
计算机科学
人工智能
经济
管理
教育学
作者
Young Hye Kwon,Kwangsun Yoo,Hillary Nguyen,Yong Hoon Jeong,Marvin M. Chun
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2110811118
摘要
While there is a substantial amount of work studying multilingualism's effect on cognitive functions, little is known about how the multilingual experience modulates the brain as a whole. In this study, we analyzed data of over 1,000 children from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study to examine whether monolinguals and multilinguals differ in executive function, functional brain connectivity, and brain-behavior associations. We observed significantly better performance from multilingual children than monolinguals in working-memory tasks. In one finding, we were able to classify multilinguals from monolinguals using only their whole-brain functional connectome at rest and during an emotional n-back task. Compared to monolinguals, the multilingual group had different functional connectivity mainly in the occipital lobe and subcortical areas during the emotional n-back task and in the occipital lobe and prefrontal cortex at rest. In contrast, we did not find any differences in behavioral performance and functional connectivity when performing a stop-signal task. As a second finding, we investigated the degree to which behavior is reflected in the brain by implementing a connectome-based behavior prediction approach. The multilingual group showed a significant correlation between observed and connectome-predicted individual working-memory performance scores, while the monolingual group did not show any correlations. Overall, our observations suggest that multilingualism enhances executive function and reliably modulates the corresponding brain functional connectome, distinguishing multilinguals from monolinguals even at the developmental stage.
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