The claim that bilingualism makes you smarter has become one of the most widely repeated findings in cognitive science. Headlines announce that speaking two languages delays dementia, enhances executive function, and may even raise IQ. But how strong is the evidence, and what does it actually show?
The Bilingual Advantage Hypothesis
The bilingual advantage hypothesis, most associated with the work of Ellen Bialystok, proposes that the constant need to manage two language systems enhances domain-general cognitive control. Specifically, bilinguals must continuously suppress the non-target language while speaking, monitor which language is appropriate in each context, and switch between language systems. This ongoing cognitive workout is thought to strengthen executive functions — particularly inhibitory control, cognitive flexibility, and working memory.
Early studies seemed to confirm this hypothesis. Bialystok’s influential research showed that bilingual children outperformed monolingual peers on tasks requiring conflict resolution (like the Simon task and Flanker task). Similar advantages were reported across the lifespan, with particularly dramatic claims about bilingualism delaying the onset of Alzheimer’s disease by 4-5 years.
The Replication Crisis
Beginning around 2014-2015, the bilingual advantage came under intense scrutiny. Large-scale replication attempts frequently failed to find the claimed executive function advantages. A comprehensive meta-analysis by Paap, Johnson, and Sawi (2015) examining 167 comparisons found no consistent bilingual advantage on executive function tasks. Studies with larger samples and better controls tended to find smaller or null effects.
What Bilingualism Does and Doesn’t Affect
While the broad “bilingual advantage” claim has weakened, some more specific effects are better supported:
Metalinguistic awareness. Bilinguals consistently show superior awareness of language structure — they understand earlier that words are arbitrary labels, can more easily identify grammatical errors, and show advantages on phonological awareness tasks. This effect is robust and well-replicated.
Language learning ability. Knowing two languages facilitates learning a third. This appears to involve both transferable knowledge (understanding of grammatical structures, vocabulary cognates) and enhanced language learning strategies.
Cognitive flexibility in language contexts. When tasks involve linguistic conflict or switching between language-like rule sets, bilinguals sometimes show advantages. The effect may be domain-specific rather than domain-general.
General intelligence (IQ). There is no convincing evidence that bilingualism raises IQ scores. Early studies finding lower IQ in bilinguals reflected testing in a weaker language and socioeconomic confounds, not a cognitive disadvantage. Current evidence suggests IQ is largely unaffected by bilingual status.
The Dementia Delay Question
The claim that bilingualism delays Alzheimer’s onset by 4-5 years is among the most consequential and most debated. The original evidence came from retrospective clinical studies showing that bilingual patients received dementia diagnoses later in life than monolinguals. However, these studies have been criticized for confounding bilingualism with immigration status, education, and cognitive reserve built through other means.
More recent longitudinal studies show mixed results. Some find a modest protective effect (1-2 years of delayed onset), others find none after controlling for education and socioeconomic status. The current consensus is that if bilingualism provides protection against cognitive decline, the effect is likely modest and difficult to separate from the broader benefits of cognitive engagement and education.
Implications
The bilingualism and cognition story is a cautionary tale about overgeneralizing from early findings. Bilingualism provides clear advantages in linguistic domains and is associated with rich cultural and social benefits. However, the evidence does not support the claim that it produces broad-spectrum cognitive enhancement or significantly raises intelligence. Parents should encourage bilingualism for its communicative, cultural, and career benefits — not as a brain-training intervention.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does speaking two languages increase IQ?
Current evidence does not support a meaningful effect of bilingualism on IQ scores. While bilinguals show advantages in metalinguistic awareness and language learning, these do not translate into higher scores on standard intelligence tests.
Should I raise my child bilingual for cognitive benefits?
Raising children bilingual has clear benefits for communication, cultural identity, career opportunities, and metalinguistic awareness. However, it should not be pursued primarily as a cognitive enhancement strategy, as the evidence for broad cognitive benefits beyond language domains is weak.
