Bilingualism as a Protective Factor for Executive Dysfunction in Autism Público
Kolios, Alexander (Spring 2024)
Abstract
While conclusions from research are mixed, there are studies that demonstrate a bilingual
advantage in executive functioning and studies that demonstrate executive dysfunction in
individuals with autism. Despite these complementary patterns of findings, very little research
has looked at the bilingual-autism experience and its effect on executive function skills. Even
fewer studies have tested this population’s performance on inhibitory control, the subdomain of
executive functioning previously shown to be most positively impacted by bilingualism, and no
studies to date have tested this population’s performance on spatial working memory, the
subdomain previously shown to be most negatively impacted by autism. This current study
aimed to investigate this relation through three sub-studies. The first being a comparison of
inhibitory control and spatial working memory skills in monolingual and bilingual adults to
replicate bilingual differences in executive function. The second being a comparison of
inhibitory control and spatial working memory skills in 7-8-year-old children with autism and
typically developing children to replicate autism-related executive function dysfunction and
demonstrate the feasibility of these tasks in these populations. And the third being the
comparison of inhibitory control and spatial working memory skills in 7-8-year-old monolingual
and bilingual children with autism to ultimately investigate the cognitive implications of this
experience. Since data collection for Study 2 and 3 are still ongoing, only the results from Study
1 are discussed. In Study 1, no significant differences were found between the monolingual and
bilingual adults on the inhibitory control and spatial working memory tasks. However, this may
be due, in part, to the amount of second language exposure experienced by the “monolingual”
participants and a possible “ceiling effect” of executive function skills. If one of these
mechanisms is in fact contributing to the null effects, these findings would serve as further
justification for Study 2 and 3 and other research with younger participants as they would be
able a illustrate a much clearer picture of how these factors, namely autism and bilingualism,
influence cognitive development.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
List of Tables ........................................................................................................................... i
List of Figures ........................................................................................................................ ii
Introduction .......................................................................................................................... 1
Bilingualism and Executive Functioning...........................................................................................2
Autism and Executive Functioning ..................................................................................................4
Interaction between Bilingualism and Autism on Executive Functioning ..........................................6
Methods ................................................................................................................................ 8
Measures .......................................................................................................................................8
Surveys ................................................................................................................................................................. 8
Experimental Tasks .............................................................................................................................................. 9
Study 1: Adult Monolinguals vs. Bilinguals .................................................................................... 11
Study 2: Neurotypical vs. Autistic Children .................................................................................... 12
Hypotheses. ........................................................................................................................................................ 12
Hypotheses. ........................................................................................................................................................ 13
Results................................................................................................................................. 14
Simon Task ................................................................................................................................... 15
Backwards Corsi Block Task .......................................................................................................... 18
Group Comparisons ..................................................................................................................... 19
Simon Task .......................................................................................................................................................... 19
Discussion............................................................................................................................ 22
Simon Task Findings ..................................................................................................................... 23
Backwards Corsi Block Task Findings ............................................................................................. 23
Second Language Experience in ‘Monolingual’ Participants ........................................................... 24
Ceiling Effect ................................................................................................................................ 27
Limitations ................................................................................................................................... 28
Implications ................................................................................................................................. 29
Conclusion ................................................................................................................................... 30
References ........................................................................................................................... 31
About this Honors Thesis
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