Investigating cognitive flexibility, selective attention and response inhibition based on gender and language
In different parts of the world, people speak different languages to each other. Some parts of the world are more linguistically rich and more than one language is spoken in those regions. The aim of this study was to evaluate and evaluate the executive functions of the brain including cognitive flexibility, selective attention and response inhibition in monolingual and bilingual male and female students of Bu Ali Sina University of Hamadan. This research has been done by descriptive and causal-comparative method using complex Stroop computer test. The statistical population selected for this study were bilingual and monolingual students of Bu Ali Sina University. The test was performed on 214 male and female students. Data obtained from 165 students were analyzed by independent t-test and one-way analysis of variance. The obtained results showed that there is a significant difference between gender and executive functions studied in this study. But there was no significant difference between bilingual and monolingual individuals with these functions. In this study, we concluded that gender affects the executive functions of the brain, but bilingualism and monolingualism do not affect the executive functions of the brain.
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The study of difference in alpha and theta band in divergent and convergent thinking in the posterior of the right hemisphere
Sepideh Shahmoradi, Mohammadreza Zoghi Paydar*, Mehran Farhadi, Shahryar Yar Mohammadivasel
Journal of Psychological Sciences, -
The Effectiveness of Combined Program Based on Strengthening Psychological Functions and Education with the TIBA Approach on the Reading Fluency in Male Students with Dyslexia
Mohammad Reza Zoghi Paydar *, Mohsen Pourjam Alavijeh, Abolghasem Yaghoubi, Rasool Kordnoghabi
Biquarterly Journal of Cognitive Strategies in Learning,