“…Based on Abutalebi and Green's model, the nonlinguistic executive mechanism is likely to be important in limiting cross-language interference and thereby facilitating cross-language treatment generalization. There are several reports of bi/multilingual patients with language and cognitive control difficulties (Green et al, 2010;Kong, Abutalebi, Lam, & Weekes, 2013;Nilipour & Ashayeri, 1989;Verreyt, De Letter, Hemelsoet, Santens, & Duyck, 2013), although their findings have rarely been interpreted within the framework of the neurocognitive model (Kong et al, 2013). Likewise, while there are treatment studies that have examined the issue of cognitive control in rehabilitation (e.g., Goral et al, 2013), the only paper to examine changes in cognitive control as a function of rehabilitation is by Abutalebi et al (2009).…”