The impact of individual differences on cross-language activation of meaning by phonology

We investigated how individual differences in language proficiency and executive control impact cross-language meaning activation through phonology. Ninety-six university students read English sentences that contained French target words. Target words were high- and low-frequency French interlingual...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bilingualism (Cambridge, England) England), 2020-03, Vol.23 (2), p.323-343, Article 1366728919000142
Hauptverfasser: Friesen, Deanna C., Whitford, Veronica, Titone, Debra, Jared, Debra
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We investigated how individual differences in language proficiency and executive control impact cross-language meaning activation through phonology. Ninety-six university students read English sentences that contained French target words. Target words were high- and low-frequency French interlingual homophones (i.e., words that share pronunciation, but not meaning across langauges; mot means 'word' in French and sounds like 'mow' in English) and matched French control words (e.g., mois - 'month' in French). Readers could use the homophones' shared phonology to activate their English meanings and, ultimately, make sense of the sentence (e.g., Tony was too lazy to mot/mois the grass on Sunday). Shorter reading times were observed on interlingual homophones than control words, suggesting that phonological representations in one language activate cross-language semantic representations. Importantly, the magnitude of the effect was modulated by word frequency, and several participant-level characteristics, including French proficiency, English word knowledge, and executive control ability.
ISSN:1366-7289
1469-1841
DOI:10.1017/S1366728919000142