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Multilingualism, society and executive functions

A bustling street in Chinatown, lined with colorful signs advertising restaurants, shops, and services, while people walk among food stalls and dining tables.
Professor Henriëtte Hendriks
Date 28/01/2025 at 17.30 - 28/01/2025 at 19.00 Where Gatsby Room (Chancellor's Centre) & Zoom

Is there a relationship between multilingualism, cognitive flexibility and other social factors?

A bustling street in Chinatown, lined with colorful signs advertising restaurants, shops, and services, while people walk among food stalls and dining tables.

Overview

For many years now, the research community has tried to identify benefits of multilingualism for cognition (executive functions). This endeavour initially came about because there was a worry about a potential disadvantage. Finding such a benefit has proven extremely difficult, though, as replication of findings has been poor.

In more recent years, therefore, researchers have started to ask the question differently and are now looking for a multilingual difference rather than an advantage. There has also been a call to use more measures of both multilingualism and executive functions. This talk will present one such study (the CLIC project) that is taking place in Singapore, a multilingual country by law.

 

Speaker

is Professor of Language Acquisition and Cognition. Her main research area is cognitive linguistics, and she researches the relationship between language and cognition through work in child first and adult second language acquisition.

Dr Hendriks studied Sinology at Leiden University, and then started her career at the Max-Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics where she worked as a coordinator on three different European-wide projects.

 

Details

This is a hybrid event, which will take place in-person in the Gatsby Room (Chancellor's Centre) and also on Zoom.

Refreshments will be available for the in-person audience.

 

Access

This event will take place in Gatsby Room on the first floor of the Chancellor's Centre. It has step-free access with a lift and there is an accessible toilet located each floor of the building.

 

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Multilingualism, society and executive functions

28/01/2025 at 17.30

Is there a relationship between multilingualism, cognitive flexibility and other social factors?