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  1. Bilingualism and Aging: Implications for (Delaying) Neurocognitive Decline.Federico Gallo, Vincent DeLuca, Yanina Prystauka, Toms Voits, Jason Rothman & Jubin Abutalebi - 2022 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 16.
    As a result of advances in healthcare, the worldwide average life expectancy is steadily increasing. However, this positive trend has societal and individual costs, not least because greater life expectancy is linked to higher incidence of age-related diseases, such as dementia. Over the past few decades, research has isolated various protective “healthy lifestyle” factors argued to contribute positively to cognitive aging, e.g., healthy diet, physical exercise and occupational attainment. The present article critically reviews neuroscientific evidence for another such factor, i.e., (...)
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    Type of bilingualism conditions individual differences in the oscillatory dynamics of inhibitory control.Sergio Miguel Pereira Soares, Yanina Prystauka, Vincent DeLuca & Jason Rothman - 2022 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 16.
    The present study uses EEG time-frequency representations with a Flanker task to investigate if and how individual differences in bilingual language experience modulate neurocognitive outcomes in two bilingual group types: late bilinguals and early bilinguals. TFRs were computed for both incongruent and congruent trials. The difference between the two was then compared between the HSs and the L2 learners, modeled as a function of individual differences with bilingual experience within each group separately and probed for its potential symmetry between brain (...)
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    Psychology of cleansing through the prism of intersecting object histories.Zachary Ekves, Yanina Prystauka, Charles P. Davis, Eiling Yee & Gerry T. M. Altmann - 2021 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 44.
    We link cleansing effects to contemporary cognitive theories via an account of event representation that provides an explicit, neurally plausible mechanism for encoding objects and their associations across time. It explains separation as resulting from weakening associations between the self in the present and the self in the past.
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