“…Children exposed to a multilingual environment, for instance, have a more challenging task than their monolingual peers, with more sound categories to acquire in the same phonetic space ( Kuhl et al, 2008 ). However, bilingual children have been shown to outperform monolinguals when detecting language changes ( Kuipers and Thierry, 2012 ), perceiving native and non-native speech contrasts ( Shafer et al, 2011 ; Petitto et al, 2012 ; Liu and Kager, 2016 , 2017a ), and learning words ( Graf Estes and Hay, 2015 ; Singh, 2017 ), regardless of the fact that they may not receive as much language input. The bilingual advantage may thus be the result of a more challenging learning environment which leads to heightened sensitivity across domains ( Liu and Kager, 2017b ).…”