27.2150, TOC: Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism 6/1/2 (2016)

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LINGUIST List: Vol-27-2150. Tue May 10 2016. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 27.2150, TOC: Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism 6/1/2 (2016)

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Date: Tue, 10 May 2016 12:58:33
From: Karin Plijnaar [karin.plijnaar at benjamins.nl]
Subject: Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism Vol. 6, No. 1/2 (2016)

 
Publisher:	John Benjamins
			http://www.benjamins.com/ 
			
Journal Title:  Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism 
Volume Number:  6 
Issue Number:  1/2 
Issue Date:  2016 


Subtitle:  Special Issue: Aging and Bilingualism   


Main Text:  

2016. vi, 226 pp.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Aging and bilingualism: Why does it matter?
Ellen Bialystok 
1 – 8

Articles

How aging and bilingualism influence language processing: Theoretical and
neural models
Eleonora Rossi and Michele Diaz 
9 – 42

Length of residence: Does it make a difference in older bilinguals?
Eve Higby and Loraine K. Obler 
43 – 63

Individual differences in cognitive control advantages of elderly late
Dutch-English bilinguals
Merel C.J. Keijzer and Monika S. Schmid 
64 – 85

Does bilingual language control decline in older age?
Iva Ivanova, Mayra Murillo, Rosa I. Montoya and Tamar H. Gollan 
86 – 118

Auditory word recognition across the lifespan: Links between linguistic and
nonlinguistic inhibitory control in bilinguals and monolinguals
Henrike K. Blumenfeld, Scott R. Schroeder, Susan C. Bobb, Max R. Freeman and
Viorica Marian 
119 – 146

Executive control processes in verbal and nonverbal working memory: The role
of aging and bilingualism
Margot D. Sullivan, Yolanda Prescott, Devora Goldberg and Ellen Bialystok 
147 – 170

Lifelong bilingualism, cognitive reserve and Alzheimer’s disease: A review of
findings
Brian T. Gold 
171 – 189

The effect of language skills on dementia in a Swedish longitudinal cohort
Jessica K. Ljungberg, Patrik Hansson, Rolf Adolfsson and Lars-Goran Nilsson 
190 – 204

The impact of bilingualism on cognitive ageing and dementia: Finding a path
through a forest of confounding variables
Thomas H. Bak 
205 – 226
 



Linguistic Field(s): Cognitive Science
                     Neurolinguistics
                     Phonology
                     Psycholinguistics

Subject Language(s): Dutch (nld)
                     English (eng)
                     Swedish (swe)



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