Perspective-Taking Ability in Bilingual Children: Extending Advantages in Executive Control to Spatial Reasoning

Cogn Dev. 2013 Jan;28(1):41-50. doi: 10.1016/j.cogdev.2012.10.002.

Abstract

Monolingual and bilingual 8-year-olds performed a computerized spatial perspective-taking task. Children were asked to decide how an observer saw a four-block array from one of three different positions (90°, 180°, and 270° counter-clockwise from the child's position) by selecting one of four responses -- the correct response, the egocentric error, an incorrect choice in which the array was correct but in the wrong orientation for the viewer, and an incorrect choice in which the array included an internal spatial error. All children performed similarly on background measures, including fluid intelligence, but bilingual children were more accurate than monolingual children in calculating the observer's view across all three positions, with no differences in the pattern of errors committed by the two language groups. The results are discussed in terms of the effect of bilingualism on modifying performance in a complex spatial task that has implications for academic achievement.

Keywords: bilingualism; executive control; perspective-taking; spatial cognition.