1. Chapter 1. The importance of bilingualism for the aging brain: Current evidence and future research directions (by Sullivan, Margot D.); 2. Chapter 2. Cognitive problems in older adults: Can bilingualism help? (by Craik, Fergus I.M.); 3. Chapter 3. How aging and bilingualism influence language processing: Theoretical and neural models (by Rossi, Eleonora); 4. Chapter 4. Length of residence: Does it make a difference in older bilinguals? (by Higby, Eve); 5. Chapter 5. Individual differences in cognitive control advantages of elderly late Dutch-English bilinguals (by Keijzer, Merel C.J.); 6. Chapter 6. Does bilingual language control decline in older age? (by Ivanova, Iva); 7. Chapter 7. Auditory word recognition across the lifespan: Links between linguistic and nonlinguistic inhibitory control in bilinguals and monolinguals (by Blumenfeld, Henrike K.); 8. Chapter 8. Executive control processes in verbal and nonverbal working memory: The role of aging and bilingualism (by Sullivan, Margot D.); 9. Chapter 9. Bilingualism, cognitive reserve and Alzheimer's disease: A review of findings (by Gold, Brian T.); 10. Chapter 10. The effect of language skills on dementia in a Swedish longitudinal cohort (by Ljungberg, Jessica K.); 11. Chapter 11. Bilingualism, cognitive reserve, aging, and dementia: What is the new ground to cover? (by Chauvin, Alexandre); 12. Chapter 12. The impact of bilingualism on cognitive ageing and dementia: Finding a path through a forest of confounding variables (by Bak, Thomas H.); 13. Chapter 13. History-inspired reflections on the Bilingual Advantages Hypothesis (by Titone, Debra)
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