A longitudinal study of episodic memory recall in multilinguals
2024 (English)In: International Journal of Bilingualism, ISSN 1367-0069, E-ISSN 1756-6878, Vol. 28, no 1, p. 125-145Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
Aim: This study investigates the effects of degree of multilingualism on cognitive functions in adulthood, with focus on episodic memory recall and including measures of verbal fluency as well as global cognition.
Design: We studied a large population-based cohort cross-sectionally, and we also assessed changes over time through longitudinal measurements on four time-points over a 15 year period. Participants were drawn from the Betula prospective cohort study in Umeå, Sweden. The participants included in this study at baseline (n = 894, mean age = 51.44, 59.4% females) were divided according to number of languages into bilinguals (n = 395), trilinguals (n = 284), quadrilinguals (n = 169), and pentalinguals (n = 46).
Data and analysis: We analysed performance on tasks of episodic memory recall, verbal fluency (letter and category) and global cognition (Minimental State Examination, MMSE) both cross-sectionally and longitudinally. The control background variables were baseline age, gender, years of education, general fluid ability Gf (Wechsler Block Design Test), and socioeconomic status. We employed a linear mixed modelling approach with entropy balancing weights to assess effects of degree of multilingualism on cognitive functions.
Findings and conclusions: Using bilinguals as the reference group, our results indicated that all the other multilingual groups exhibited superior performance on episodic memory recall than bilinguals at baseline. The rate of change over time did not differ for trilinguals and pentalinguals compared to bilinguals. While quadrilinguals declined more over time than bilinguals, they still scored significantly higher than bilinguals at the last test wave. For letter fluency, similarly, all language groups scored higher than bilinguals at baseline, and none of the groups differed from bilinguals in rate of change over time. With regard to category fluency, quadrilinguals scored higher than bilinguals at baseline, but trilinguals and pentalinguals did not differ from bilinguals and none of the groups differed in change over time compared to bilinguals. Finally, for global cognition (MMSE), trilinguals and quadrilinguals scored significantly higher than bilinguals at baseline with no differences in change over time for any of the groups relative to bilinguals. Our study contributes to the understanding of multilingual cognition and sheds light into an under-researched cognitive domain known to decline in normal ageing, namely episodic memory recall.
Significance: Our study emphasizes the importance of researching less explored aspects of multilingualism on cognition, in particular on episodic memory recall, to aid our understanding of factors that could potentially aid cognitive decline in later adulthood.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Sage Publications, 2024. Vol. 28, no 1, p. 125-145
Keywords [en]
Ageing, bilingualism, multilingualism, episodic memory, verbal fluency, cognition
National Category
Psychology (excluding Applied Psychology)
Research subject
Psychology
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-95237DOI: 10.1177/13670069221139155ISI: 000903112200001Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85145283211OAI: oai:DiVA.org:ltu-95237DiVA, id: diva2:1727267
Funder
Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation, KAW 2014.0205Riksbankens Jubileumsfond, 1988-0082:17, J2001-0682Swedish Research Council, K2010-61X-21446-01; 345-2003-3883; 315-2004-6977
Note
Validerad;2024;Nivå 2;2024-03-15 (hanlid);
Funder: Swedish Council for Planning and Coordination of Research (Forskningsrådsnämnden) (D1988-0092, D1989-0115, D1990-0074, D1991-0258, D1992-0143, D1997-0756, D1997-1841, D1999-0739 and B1999-474); Swedish Council for Research in the Humanities and Social Sciences (F377/1988-2000); Swedish Council for Social Research (1988-1990: 88-0082, 311/1991-2000);
Full text license: CC BY
2023-01-162023-01-162024-03-27Bibliographically approved