Bilinguals constantly need to mentally juggle several languages, which is said to carry over from the language to the general cognitive domain (Grant, Dennis, & Li, 2014). This effect has behaviorally been found to be manifested as better cognitive flexibility (Kroll & Bialystok, 2013), a skill needed to separate the two languages in one mind (Bice & Kroll, 2015). More so than when learning other new skills, learning a new language interferes with earlier acquired language skills; it impacts first language processing and storage (cf. Li, Legault, & Litcofsky, 2014). It is for this reason that foreign language training is expected to boost cognitive flexibility more than other cognitive training programs. Although there is a wealth of observ...