Thinking in a foreign language distorts allocation of cognitive effort: Evidence from reasoning

Cognition. 2020 Dec:205:104420. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2020.104420. Epub 2020 Oct 6.

Abstract

Bilinguals, in their foreign language, are spared from several decision-making biases. We examined this "Foreign Language Effect" in the context of logical reasoning, in which reasoners are required to track the logical status of a syllogism, ignoring its believability. Across three experiments, we found the reverse Foreign Language Effect; foreign language reasoners are less able to evaluate the logical structure of syllogisms, but no less biased by their believability. One path to succeeding in reasoning tasks is always engaging in reflective processing. A more efficient strategy is metacognitively tracking whether belief-based intuitions conflict with logic-based intuitions and only reflecting when such conflict is present. We provide evidence that foreign language reasoners are less accurate because they struggle to detect belief-logic conflict, and in turn fail to engage in reflective processing when necessary to override the incorrect, intuitive response. We propose that foreign language reasoners are less able to detect belief-logic conflict either due to weakened intuitions or due to a more conservative threshold for the detection of conflict between multiple competing intuitions. Data for the experiments can be accessed publicly at https://osf.io/phbuq/.

Keywords: Conflict detection; Dual-process theory; Foreign Language Effect; Logical intuition; Reasoning; Signal detection theory.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Intuition
  • Language*
  • Logic
  • Problem Solving*