In:The Internal Context of Bilingual Processing
John Truscott and Michael Sharwood Smith
[Bilingual Processing and Acquisition 8] 2019
► pp. 125–150
Chapter 6Cognitive control and language control
Published online: 26 August 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/bpa.8.c6
https://doi.org/10.1075/bpa.8.c6
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.The homunculus issue
- 2.1The problem
- 2.2Language control and the homunculus problem
- 2.2.1‘Control’ and the homunculus problem
- 2.2.2‘Access’ and the homunculus problem
- 2.2.3‘Selection’ and the homunculus problem
- 2.2.4Conclusion
- 3.Control
- 3.1The nature of control
- 3.2The neural basis for control
- 3.2.1Control regions in the brain
- 3.2.2Local synchronization of processing
- 3.2.3Global synchronization of processing
- 3.3Control as selective activation
- 3.3.1Activation: Cognitive and neural
- 3.3.2Activation: Sensory and executive
- 3.3.3Inhibition and the Veto Hypothesis
- 3.4Cognitive control and bilingual processing
- 4.Setting the stage for control
- 4.1Outside-in context as the stage for control
- 4.1.1Outside-in context and cognitive control
- 4.1.2Outside-in context and language control
- 4.2The stage within the linguistic modules
- 4.2.1The state of the linguistic modules
- 4.2.2Crosslinguistic activation: Items from both languages are on-stage
- 4.1Outside-in context as the stage for control
- 5.Cognitive control and modularity
- 6.Control: Hierarchical vs. heterarchical
- 7.Conclusion
Notes
