Fluent bilinguals seem to have both languages active at all times, whether both languages are consciously being used or not, according to researchers from Pennsylvania State University.
"In the past, bilinguals were looked down upon. Not only is bilingualism not bad for you, it may be really good. When you're switching languages all the time it strengthens your mental muscle and your executive function becomes enhanced," said Judith F Kroll, Distinguished Professor of Psychology, Linguistics and Women's Studies.
Bilinguals rarely say a word in the unintended language, which suggests that they have the ability to control the parallel activity of both languages and ultimately select the intended language without needing to consciously think about it.
Participants read the sentences silently until they came across a word displayed in red, at which point they were instructed to read the red word out loud, as quickly and accurately as possible.
About half of the red words were cognates - words that look and sound similar and have the same meaning in both languages.
"Cognate words were processed more quickly than control words," said Jason W Gullifer, a graduate student in psychology, suggesting that both languages are active at the same time.
The second experiment's results were similar to the first, suggesting that context does not influence word recognition.
"The context of the experiment didn't seem to matter. If you look at bilinguals there seems to be some kind of mechanistic control," said Gullifer.
The study was published in the journal Frontiers in Psychology.
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