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Learning second language morphosyntax in dialogue under explicit and implicit conditions: An experimental study with advanced adult learners of German Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-03-21 Eva M. Koch, Johanna F. de Vos, Alex Housen, Aline Godfroid, Kristin Lemhöfer
We investigate the role of awareness in learning non-salient grammar features in a second language during oral interaction. We conducted a learning experiment during which forty-eight adult Dutch-speaking advanced learners of German and a native German-speaking experimenter engaged in a scripted oral dialogue game. The experimenter and learner in turn produced sentences based on pictures eliciting
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Examining the relation between bilingualism and age of symptom onset in frontotemporal dementia Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-03-09 Jessica de Leon, Stephanie M. Grasso, Isabel Elaine Allen, Danielle P. Escueta, Yvette Vega, Malihe Eshghavi, Christa Watson, Nina Dronkers, Maria Luisa Gorno-Tempini, Maya L. Henry
Bilingualism is thought to confer advantages in executive functioning, thereby contributing to cognitive reserve and a later age of dementia symptom onset. While the relation between bilingualism and age of onset has been explored in Alzheimer's dementia, there are few studies examining bilingualism as a contributor to cognitive reserve in frontotemporal dementia (FTD). In line with previous findings
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How a second language and its future time reference impacts intertemporal decision: A holistic perspective Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-03-09 Yuepei Xu, Chenggang Wu, Yang-Yang Zhang, Zhu-Yuan Liang
Since globalization, using second languages (L2) to make decisions about future is more common than ever. In this study, we tested the merged effect of two language features, i.e., the future-time reference (FTR) and L2, on intertemporal decision and its indirect mediators, future orientation, and subjective future perception. As a pair of languages with different FTR, English (strong-FTR) has a clear
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Language proficiency predictors of code-switching behavior in dual-language-learning children Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-03-09 L. T. Schächinger Tenés, J. C. Weiner-Bühler, L. Volpin, A. Grob, K. Skoruppa, R. K. Segerer
Code-switching, switching between different languages within the same conversation, is a prominent feature in bilingual communication. This study aimed to elucidate to what extent the linguistic abilities and age of dual-language-learning preschoolers influence the frequency and purposes of code-switching (compensatory, to bridge linguistic gaps; preferential, to express content as fluently as possible;
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Multimodal language in bilingual and monolingual children: Gesture production and speech disfluency Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-03-09 Burcu Arslan, Aslı Aktan-Erciyes, Tilbe Göksun
Bilingual and monolingual children might have different styles of using multimodal language. This study investigates speech disfluency and gesture production of 5- and 7-year-old Turkish monolingual (N = 61) and Turkish–English bilingual children (N = 51). We examined monolinguals’ Turkish narratives and bilinguals’ Turkish and English narratives. Results indicated that bilinguals were more disfluent
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Does Spanish knowledge contribute to accurate English word spelling in adult bilinguals? Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-03-07 Valeria M. Rigobon, Nuria Gutiérrez, Ashley A. Edwards, Daniel Abes, Laura M. Steacy, Donald L. Compton
Correctly spelling an English word requires a high-quality orthographic representation. When faced with spelling a complex word without a high-quality representation, spellers often rely on other knowledge sources (e.g., incomplete stored orthographic forms, phonological to orthographic relationships) to spell it. For bilinguals, another potentially facilitative source is knowledge of a word's lexical
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Earlier mastery of English predicts 5th Grade academic outcomes for low-income dual language learners in Miami, USA Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-03-07 Adam Winsler, Nadine Rozell, Tevis L. Tucker, Gabriele Norvell
Earlier acquisition of English is associated with better academic performance for dual language learners (DLLs), but large-scale, prospective, longitudinal studies examining how trajectories for English acquisition relate to school-based outcomes, accounting for relevant covariates, are rare. We explored how the grade in which DLLs (N = 17,548; 47% female; 80% free/reduced-price lunch; 86% Latino,
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Glottalizing at word junctures: Exploring bidirectional transfer in child and adult Spanish heritage speakers Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-03-06 Gemma Repiso-Puigdelliura
While research in heritage language phonology has found that transfer from the majority language can lead to divergent attainment in adult heritage language grammars, the extent to which language transfer develops during a heritage speaker's lifespan is understudied. To explore such cross-linguistic transfer, I examine the rate of glottalization between consonant-to-vowel sequences at word junctures
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Executive functions are modulated by the context of dual language use: diglossic, bilingual and monolingual older adults Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-02-27 Najla Alrwaita, Carmel Houston-Price, Lotte Meteyard, Toms Voits, Christos Pliatsikas
Studies investigating the role of dual language use in modulating executive functions have reported mixed results, with some studies reporting benefits in older adults. These studies typically focus on bilingual settings, while the role of dual language use in diglossic settings is rarely investigated. In diglossia, the two language varieties are separated by context, making it an ideal test case for
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High-level listening comprehension in advanced English as a second language: Effects of the first language and inhibitory control Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-02-27 Mandy Wigdorowitz, Ana I. Pérez, Ianthi M. Tsimpli
English is imposed as the language of instruction in multiple linguistically diverse societies where there is more than one official language. This might have negative educational consequences for people whose first language (L1) is not English. To investigate this, 47 South Africans with advanced English proficiency but different L1s (L1-English vs. L1-Zulu) were evaluated in their listening comprehension
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Lexical production and innovation in child and adult Russian Heritage speakers dominant in English and Hebrew Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-02-27 Clara Fridman, Natalia Meir
The present study investigated lexical production and innovation of 202 participants across six groups: child and adult heritage speakers of Russian, dominant in Hebrew or American English, and monolingual Russian-speaking children and adults. Understanding quantitative performance across these six groups was intended to provide a comprehensive perspective on heritage language (HL) development, while
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Mixed language processing increases cross-language phonetic transfer in Bengali–English bilinguals Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-02-27 Auromita Mitra, Indranil Dutta
This study investigates the phonetic outcome of mixed-language speech in Bengali and Indian English, towards understanding cross-language interaction in highly proficient bilinguals. We compare spectral properties of L2 vowels [æ] (common to L1, L2) and [ʌ] (absent in L1) in code-switched (mixed) vs. nonswitched productions. Results reveal asymmetrical shifts in both vowels during mixed productions
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Prospective memory in bilinguals: Recalling future intentions in first and second language contexts Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-02-27 Cristina López-Rojas, Alejandra Marful, Ana I. Pérez, M. Teresa Bajo
Recalling future intentions (i.e., prospective memory, PM) plays an essential role in everyday life, but sometimes, if the person is involved in a demanding ongoing task, PM is unsuccessful. This is especially relevant for bilinguals who, in many situations, have to recall intentions while performing a task in their second language (L2). Our aim was to explore whether PM is modulated by the linguistic
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Behavioral and ERP evidence of differences in pitch feedback control in late bilinguals’ L1 and L2 speech production Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-02-23 Xiao Cai, Yulong Yin, Qingfang Zhang
This study compared late bilinguals’ pitch feedback control in L1 and L2 production using a frequency-altered feedback paradigm in which participants read target words while presented with unexpected pitch-shift in their voice feedback. Variables of language (L1 or L2) and perturbation magnitudes (0, 100, 200, or 400 cents) were manipulated. Behaviorally, participants produced larger magnitudes but
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Monolingual and Bilingual Phonological Activation in Cantonese Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-02-23 Ming Yan, Yingyi Luo, Jinger Pan
Previous research has provided evidence for cross-language phonological activation during visual word recognition. However, such findings mainly came from alphabetic languages, and readers’ familiarity with the two scripts might differ. The present study aimed to test whether such cross-language phonological activation can be observed in Chinese, a logographic script, without the confounding factor
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The production preferences and priming effects of Dutch passives in Arabic/Berber–Dutch and Turkish–Dutch heritage speakers Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-02-22 Rianne van Lieburg, Robert Hartsuiker, Sarah Bernolet
Cross-linguistic structural priming effects suggest that bilinguals have shared or connected memory representations for similar syntactic structures. This predicts an influence of the production preferences of one language in the other language (Bernolet & Hartsuiker, 2018). We hypothesized that shared structures will lead to a facilitatory effect on production frequencies, whereas connected structures
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Planning scope in second language sentence production: Do bilingual speakers plan ahead more in L1 than in L2? Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-02-15 Felicity F. Frinsel, Robert J. Hartsuiker
Language production is incremental in nature; we tend to plan linguistic chunks prior to articulating the first word of the utterance. Researchers have acquired knowledge about how far ahead sentences are generally planned, but mostly in monolinguals or the speaker's first language (Allum & Wheeldon, 2007; Martin, Crowther, Knight, Tamborello II, & Yang, 2010; Wagner, Jescheniak, & Schriefers, 2010)
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L1 referential features influence pronoun reading in L2 for deaf, ASL–English bilinguals Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-02-10 Katherine Sendek, David P. Corina, Deborah Cates, Matthew J. Traxler, Tamara Y. Swaab
Referential processing relies on similar cognitive functions across languages – in particular, working memory. However, this has only been investigated in spoken languages with highly similar referential systems. In contrast to spoken languages, American Sign Language (ASL) uses a spatial referential system. It is unknown whether the referential system of ASL (L1) impacts referential processing in
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Structural priming of code-switches in non-shared-word-order utterances: The effect of lexical repetition Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-02-07 Robyn Berghoff, Marianne Gullberg, Gerrit Jan Kootstra
Code-switching is generally dispreferred at points of non-shared word order across a bilingual's two languages. In priming studies, this dispreference persists even following exposure to a code-switched non-shared-word-order utterance. The present study delves deeper into the scope of code-switching priming by investigating whether lexical repetition across target and prime, a factor known to boost
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Cognitive restructuring: Psychophysical measurement of time perception in bilinguals Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-02-06 Panos Athanasopoulos, Emanuel Bylund
This paper explores the link between the metaphoric structure TIME IS SPACE and time perception in bilinguals. While there appear to be fundamental commonalities in the way humans perceive and experience time regardless of language background, language-specific spatiotemporal metaphors can give rise to differences between populations, under certain conditions. Little is known, however, about how bilinguals
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Predicting processing effort during L1 and L2 reading: The relationship between text linguistic features and eye movements Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-02-06 Shingo Nahatame
Researchers have taken great interest in the assessment of text readability. This study expands on this research by developing readability models that predict the processing effort involved during first language (L1) and second language (L2) text reading. Employing natural language processing tools, the study focused on assessing complex linguistic features of texts, and these features were used to
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Do structure predictions persevere to multilinguals’ other languages? Evidence from cross-linguistic structural priming in comprehension Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-02-02 Xuemei Chen, Suiping Wang, Robert J. Hartsuiker
Many cross-language sentence processing studies showed structural priming, which suggests a shared representation across languages or separate but interacting representations for each language. To investigate whether multilinguals can rely on such representations to predict structure in comprehension, we conducted two visual-world eye-tracking priming experiments with Cantonese–Mandarin-English multilinguals
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Rethinking Multilingual Experience through a Systems Framework of Bilingualism: Response to Commentaries Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-01-30 Debra A. Titone, Mehrgol Tiv
In Rethinking Multilingual Experience through a Systems Framework of Bilingualism (Titone & Tiv, 2022), we encouraged psycholinguists and cognitive neuroscientists to consider integrating social and ecological aspects of multilingualism into a collective understanding of its cognitive and neurocognitive bases (i.e., to rethink experience). We then offered a framework – the Systems Framework of Bilingualism–
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Detangling experiential, cognitive, and sociopsychological individual differences in second language speech learning: Cross-sectional and longitudinal investigations Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-01-27 Yui Suzukida, Kazuya Saito
In this two-part study, we conducted both cross-sectional and longitudinal investigations on the relative weights of experiential, cognitive, and sociopsychological factors in adult L2 speech learning. In the cross-sectional phase (Study 1), speech was elicited from 73 Japanese speakers of English via a picture description task, and rated for accentedness and comprehensibility. These scores were linked
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Bilingual toddlers show increased attention capture by static faces compared to monolinguals Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-01-20 Victoria L Mousley, Mairéad MacSweeney, Evelyne Mercure
Bilingual infants rely differently than monolinguals on facial information, such as lip patterns, to differentiate their native languages. This may explain, at least in part, why young monolinguals and bilinguals show differences in social attention. For example, in the first year, bilinguals attend faster and more often to static faces over non-faces than do monolinguals (Mercure et al., 2018). However
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Second language acquisition of grammatical rules: The effects of learning condition, rule difficulty, and executive function Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-01-18 Marta Rivera, Daniela Paolieri, Antonio Iniesta, Ana I Pérez, Teresa Bajo
Learning a new language is an important goal that many individuals find difficult to achieve, particularly during adulthood. Several factors have related this variability to different extrinsic (learning condition, difficulty of the materials) and intrinsic (cognitive abilities) factors, but the interaction between them is barely known. In two experiments, participants learned English grammar rules
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Hearing emotion in two languages: A pupillometry study of Cantonese–Mandarin bilinguals’ perception of affective cognates in L1 and L2 Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-01-17 Yao Yao, Katrina Connell, Stephen Politzer-Ahles
Differential affective processing has been widely documented for bilinguals: L1 affective words elicit higher levels of arousal and stronger emotionality ratings than L2 affective words (Pavlenko, 2012). In this study, we focus on two closely related Chinese languages, Mandarin and Cantonese, whose affective lexicons are highly overlapping, with shared lexical items that only differ in pronunciation
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The interface of explicit and implicit second-language knowledge: A longitudinal study Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-01-09 Kathy MinHye Kim, Aline Godfroid
The aim of our study was to examine the longitudinal associations between two forms of second language (L2) knowledge (i.e., explicit and implicit knowledge) and the activity types that facilitate different processing mechanisms (i.e., form- and meaning-focused processing). L2 English speakers completed two tests of explicit knowledge (untimed written grammaticality judgment test and metalinguistic
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The association between language exposure and nonword repetition performance in bilingual children: A systematic review and meta-analysis Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-12-28 Gianmatteo Farabolini, Analí R. Taboh, Maria Gabriella Ceravolo, Federico Guerra
We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis on the association between nonword repetition (NWR) and language exposure in bilingual children and explored whether the association is influenced by other variables. We performed a blind literature review on ERIC and Google Scholar, a random-effects model meta-analysis and subgroup analyses to test potential moderators. Out of 822 screened articles
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On the way to an interpreter advantage in coordination: evidence from interpreting students across different training stages Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-12-27 Fei Zhong, Yanping Dong
Despite extensive discussions on interpreter advantages in nonverbal abilities/skills, the advantage in coordination remains underexplored, with little evidence from interpreting students across different training stages. To fill the gap, the present study conducted two experiments with the Psychological Refractory Period dual-task consisting of two discrimination tasks presented either alone or together
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The effects of multilingual and multicultural practices on divergent thinking. Implications for plurilingual creativity paradigm Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-12-23 Anatoliy V. Kharkhurin, Valeriya Koncha, Morteza Charkhabi
This study opens a project that empirically investigates the Plurilingual Creativity paradigm. This paradigm expands the Multilingual Creative Cognition by making shifts in the conceptualization of the phenomena of multilingualism and creativity, respectively. We examined how multilingual and multicultural factors can contribute to divergent thinking. Online data collection included assessments of
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Bilingual interactional contexts predict executive functions in older adults Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-12-12 Hwajin Yang, Germaine Y. Q. Tng, Gilaine Rui Ng, Wee Qin Ng
Drawing on the adaptive control hypothesis, we examined whether older adults’ bilingual interactional contexts of conversational exchanges would predict important indices of executive functions (EF). We assessed participants’ engagement in each bilingual interactional context – single-language, dual-language, and dense code-switching – and their performance on a series of nonverbal EF measures. Sixty-nine
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The foreign-language effect on self-positivity bias: Behavioral and electrophysiological evidence Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-12-12 Wanyu Zhang, Yuxin Lan, Qian Li, Zhao Gao, Jiehui Hu, Shan Gao
Previous research has shown that using foreign languages reduces cognitive biases. Here, we investigate whether this foreign-language effect extends to self-related cognition – in particular, the self-positivity bias, which refers to automatic association of oneself with positive information and has a facilitation role in maintaining mental health. We applied event-related brain potentials and oscillations
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Linguistic factors modulating gender assignment in Spanish–English bilingual speech Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-12-12 Abel Cruz
Drawing on naturally-occurring bilingual speech from a well-defined codeswitching community in Southern Arizona, this study examined the influence of semantic gender (a.k.a. biological gender), analogical gender, and other-language phonemic cues in modulating gender assignment in Spanish–English codeswitched speech. Thirty-four Spanish–English early bilinguals completed a forced-choice elicitation
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Evidence for two stages of prediction in non-native speakers: A visual-world eye-tracking study Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-12-06 Ruth E. Corps, Meijian Liao, Martin J. Pickering
Comprehenders predict what a speaker is likely to say when listening to non-native (L2) and native (L1) utterances. But what are the characteristics of L2 prediction, and how does it relate to L1 prediction? We addressed this question in a visual-world eye-tracking experiment, which tested when L2 English comprehenders integrated perspective into their predictions. Male and female participants listened
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On trade-offs in bilingualism and moving beyond the Stacking the Deck fallacy Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-12-05 Evelina Leivada, Vittoria Dentella, Camilla Masullo, Jason Rothman
Despite a meteoric rise, results in the cognitive science of bilingualism present with significant inconsistency. In parallel, there is a striking absence of an ecologically valid theory within bilingualism research. How should one interpret the totality of available data that can pull in opposing directions? To proceed, we need to identify which practices impede progression. Hitherto, we bring to
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The role of daily spoken language on the performance of language tests: The Indonesian experience Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-12-05 Heni Gerda Pesau, Aria Saloka Immanuel, Augustina Sulastri, Gilles van Luijtelaar
The performance of cognitive tests is highly dependent on the proficiency of the language in which the tests are administered. Not all Indonesians speak Indonesian daily and many are bilingual. We investigate whether language(s) spoken affects the performance on three language tests in 840 participants ranging in age (16–80) and education (6–22 years). Analysis of covariance followed by Helmert contrasts
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Consequences of mixing and switching languages for retrieval and articulation Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-11-28 Maria Fernanda Gavino, Matthew Goldrick
A large literature has shown that language context –mixing and switching between languages – impacts lexical access processes during bilingual speech production. Recent work has suggested parallel contextual effects of language context on the phonetic realization of speech sounds, consistent with interactions between lexical access and phonetic processes. In this pre-registered study, we directly examine
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The contributions of proficiency and semantics to the bilingual sentence superiority effect Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-11-28 Portia N. Washington, Robert W. Wiley
A long-standing question about bilingualism concerns which representations are shared across languages. Recent work has revealed a bilingual Sentence Superiority Effect (SSE) among French–English bilinguals reading mixed-language sentences: identification of target words is more accurate in syntactically grammatical than ungrammatical sentences. While this ability to connect words across the two languages
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Multilingualism and verbal short-term/working memory: Evidence from academics Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-11-28 Valantis Fyndanis, Sarah Cameron, Pernille Bonnevie Hansen, Monica I. Norvik, Hanne Gram Simonsen
To date, the evidence regarding the effect of bilingualism/multilingualism on short-term memory (STM) and working memory (WM) capacity is inconclusive. This study investigates whether multilingualism has a positive effect on the verbal STM and WM capacity of neurotypical middle-aged and older individuals. Eighty-two L1-Norwegian sequential bilingual/multilingual academics were tested with tasks measuring
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Is the digit effect a cognate effect? Digits (still) differ from pictures in non-phonologically mediated language switching Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-11-17 Hong Liu, Adel Chaouch-Orozco
Language control in bilinguals is often investigated with the language switching paradigm. Switch costs reflect the ease/difficulty of applying this control mechanism. The type of stimuli employed in the experiments may influence switch costs. To date, only one study has compared digit vs picture processing, reporting reduced switch costs for digits (Declerck, Koch & Philipp, 2012). This result was
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Structured variation, language experience, and crosslinguistic influence shape child heritage speakers’ Spanish direct objects Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-11-17 Naomi Shin, Alejandro Cuza, Liliana Sánchez
This study investigates child heritage speakers’ Spanish direct objects. A task designed to elicit direct objects was completed in Spanish and English by 40 child heritage speakers of Spanish in the U.S., and in Spanish by 24 monolingual children in Mexico. Both participant groups varied their direct object forms, following the same ranking: clitics>lexical NPs>omission>doubling. Animate referents
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An ex-Gaussian analysis of eye movements in L2 reading Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-11-16 Steven G. Luke, Rachel Yu Liu, Kyle Nelson, Jared Denton, Michael W. Child
Second language learners’ reading is less efficient and more effortful than native reading. However, the source of their difficulty is unclear; L2 readers might struggle with reading in a different orthography, or they might have difficulty with later stages of linguistic interpretation of the input, or both. The present study explored the source of L2 reading difficulty by analyzing the distribution
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Riding the (brain) waves! Using neural oscillations to inform bilingualism research Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-11-04 Eleonora Rossi, Sergio Miguel Pereira Soares, Yanina Prystauka, Megan Nakamura, Jason Rothman
The study of the brains’ oscillatory activity has been a standard technique to gain insights into human neurocognition for a relatively long time. However, as a complementary analysis to ERPs, only very recently has it been utilized to study bilingualism and its neural underpinnings. Here, we provide a theoretical and methodological starter for scientists in the (psycho)linguistics and neurocognition
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Multilingualism and mentalizing abilities in adults Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-10-27 Ashley Chung-Fat-Yim, Ronda F. Lo, Raymond A. Mar
Bilingual children have better Theory-of-Mind compared to monolingual children, but comparatively little research has examined whether this advantage in social cognitive ability also applies to adults. The current study investigated whether multilingual status and/or number of known languages predicts performance on a mentalizing task in a large sample of adult participants. Multilingualism was decomposed
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Prediction in bilingual sentence processing: How prediction differs in a later learned language from a first language Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-10-27 Judith Schlenter
This review provides an update on what we know about differences in prediction in a first and second language after several years of extensive research. It shows when L1/L2 differences are most likely to occur and provides an explanation as to why they occur. For example, L2 speakers may capitalize more on semantic information for prediction than L1 speakers, or possibly they do not make predictions
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ERP differences between monolinguals and bilinguals: The role of linguistic distance Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-10-26 Cassandra Morrison, Vanessa Taler
A growing body of research suggests that bilingualism may afford benefits to certain aspects of cognitive functioning. Inconsistent findings may arise because of methodological differences within and across studies. One limitation is that studies often compare linguistically similar languages. The present study recorded brain activity (event-related potentials; ERPs) while English monolinguals, English–French
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‘Good for you!’ Processing social emotions in L2 discourse comprehension: an ERP study Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-10-26 Andrea González-García Aldariz, Pablo Rodríguez-Gómez, Carlos Romero-Rivas, Sara Rodríguez-Cuadrado, Alice Foucart, Eva M. Moreno
Social factors impact sentence comprehension in a first language (L1), suggesting that semantic processing cannot be dissociated from social and moral emotions in relation to pro/antisocial individuals. Given that integrating multiple types of information and processing emotion-laden pragmatic information is costlier in a second language (L2), we investigated whether social factors would affect discourse
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Subcortical plasticity and enhanced neural synchrony in multilingual adults Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-10-25 Zahra Jafari, Caroline Villeneuve, Jordon Thompson, Amineh Koravand
Whereas growing evidence supports the advantages of bilingualism for brain structure and function, no study has shown multilingual-related neuroplasticity in response to speech stimuli at the subcortical level. To investigate the impact of multilingualism on subcortical auditory processing, the speech auditory evoked response (speech-ABR) was recorded on 35 young adults. The multilingual group completed
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Semantically related gestures facilitate language comprehension during simultaneous interpreting Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-10-10 Eléonore Arbona, Kilian G. Seeber, Marianne Gullberg
Manual co-speech gestures can facilitate language comprehension, but do they influence language comprehension in simultaneous interpreters, and if so, is this influence modulated by simultaneous interpreting (SI) and/or by interpreting experience? In a picture-matching task, 24 professional interpreters and 24 professional translators were exposed to utterances accompanied by semantically matching
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Competition between form-related words in bilingual sentence reading: Effects of language proficiency Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-10-07 Maud Pélissier, Dag Haugland, Bjørn Handeland, Beatrice Zitong Urland, Allison Wetterlin, Linda Wheeldon, Steven Frisson
Sentence reading involves constant competition between lexical candidates. Previous research with monolinguals has shown that the neighbours of a read word are inhibited, making their retrieval as a subsequent target more difficult, but the duration of this interference may depend on reading skills. In this study, we examined neighbour priming effects in sentence reading among proficient Norwegian–English
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Language switching in different contexts and modalities: Response-stimulus interval influences cued-naming but not voluntary-naming or comprehension language-switching costs Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-10-07 Angela de Bruin, Tianyi Xu
Language switching is often associated with language competition and switching costs. However, the underlying mechanisms might differ depending on context (free versus cued naming) and modality (production or comprehension). In this study, we assessed how response-stimulus intervals (RSI) influence language-switching costs. Longer RSIs might provide more time for interference from the previous trial
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Orthographic and semantic priming effects in neighbour cognates: Experiments and simulations Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-10-06 Ton Dijkstra, David Peeters, Wessel Hieselaar, Aaron van Geffen
To investigate how orthography and semantics interact during bilingual visual word recognition, Dutch–English bilinguals made lexical decisions in two masked priming experiments. Dutch primes and English targets were presented that were either neighbour cognates (boek – BOOK), noncognate translations (kooi – CAGE), orthographically related neighbours (neus – NEWS), or unrelated words (huid - COAT)
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Child, would you sacrifice yourself? A study on the Foreign Language Effect in children Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-09-06 Celia Fernández-Sanz, Carlos Romero-Rivas, Sara Rodriguez-Cuadrado
The moral foreign-language effect (M-FLE) translates into more utilitarian choices, even when given the option of self-sacrifice. We explore the M-FLE in 85 children, who were presented with seven moral dilemmas varying in utilitarianism, aversiveness, and whether they allowed the option of self-sacrifice; 42 answered to the dilemmas in their native language (Spanish), and 43 in a foreign language
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Changing pronoun interpretations across-languages: discourse priming in Spanish–English bilingual speakers Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-08-23 Carla Contemori, Natalia I. Minjarez Oppenheimer
Are bilingual speakers’ representations of pronominal expressions completely independent in the two languages, or is there sharing of discourse-level representations cross-linguistically? In the present study, we address this question by using a sentence comprehension task that implements the cross-linguistic priming technique at the discourse-level. In two experiments conducted with Spanish–English
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Tracking reading development in an English language university-level bridging program: evidence from eye-movements during passage reading Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-08-15 Daniel Schmidtke, Sadaf Rahmanian, Anna L. Moro
Increasing numbers of international students enter university education via English language bridging programs. Much research has overlooked the nature of second language reading development during a bridging program, focusing instead on the development of literacy skills of international students who already meet the language requirement for undergraduate admission. We report a longitudinal eye-movement
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The foreign language effect on motivational quotes Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-08-12 Barbara Braida, Javier Rodríguez-Ferreiro, Mireia Hernández
According to the “reduced emotionality hypothesis”, we are less emotionally driven when reasoning in a foreign language (FL) than in a native language (NL). We examined whether this foreign language effect (FLe) extends to the way we perceive motivational quotes (i.e., encouraging slogans conveying a profound and inspirational message): we expected FL participants to rate motivational quotes as less
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Conceptual metaphor activation in Chinese–English bilinguals Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-08-11 Huilan Yang, J. Nick Reid, Yuru Mei
An episodic memory experiment was conducted to examine whether “conceptual metaphors” influence how metaphorical expressions are processed and encoded into memory. Forty Chinese–English bilinguals read lists of expressions in their L1 and L2. The data revealed that after reading a series of metaphorical expressions based on the same underlying conceptual metaphor, participants falsely recognized new
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Children's likelihood to perform adult-like in word association test: Effects of bilingualism and distributional properties of word relationships Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Boji P. W. Lam, Li Sheng, Xian Zhang
Little is known about the effects of bilingualism and distributional properties of word relationships on children's development of semantic convergence, operationalized as children's ability to produce word associates that mirror adults’ responses in a word association task. Forty-five Mandarin–English bilingual, 32 Spanish–English bilingual, and 28 English-speaking monolingual children, aged 4 to
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When left is right: The role of typological similarity in multilinguals’ inhibitory control performance Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2022-07-29 Sarah Von Grebmer Zu Wolfsthurn, Anna Gupta, Leticia Pablos, Niels O. Schiller
Both inhibitory control and typological similarity between two languages feature frequently in current research on multilingual cognitive processing mechanisms. Yet, the modulatory effect of speaking two typologically highly similar languages on inhibitory control performance remains largely unexplored. However, this is a critical issue because it speaks directly to the organisation of the multilingual's