“…While effects are not always replicated (see Lehtonen et al, 2018 ), studies have shown that, at least under certain conditions, the brain adapts structurally, functionally and chemically to bilingual experience (e.g., Stocco et al, 2014 ; Abutalebi and Green, 2016 ; Weekes et al, 2018 ; DeLuca et al, 2019a ; Pliatsikas, 2019 ; Grundy, 2020 ; Pliatsikas et al, 2021 ). And yet, the study of bilingualism and neurocognition has primarily focused on monolingual vs. bilingual (dichotomous) group comparisons across a variety of domains and tasks (see Salig et al, 2021 for review). While such an approach has led to keen insights into the bilingual mind and brain, it has also resulted in the nature of individual-level variables across bilinguals themselves to not be adequately addressed (Pliatsikas et al, 2020 ; Salig et al, 2021 ).…”