The repository is currently being upgraded to DSpace 7. Temporarily, only admins can login. Submission of items and changes to existing items is prohibited until the completion of this upgrade process.
Bidirectional cross-linguistic influence with different-script languages: Evidence from eye tracking
Abstract
This study compared patterns of non-selective cross-language activation in L1 and L2 visual
word recognition with different-script bilinguals. The aim was to determine (1) whether
lexical processing is non-selective in the L1 (as in L2), and (2) if the same cross-linguistic
factors affected processing similarly in each language. To examine the time course of
activation, eye movements were tracked during lexical decision. Thirty-two Japanese-English
bilinguals responded to 250 target words in Japanese and in English. The same participants
and items (i.e., cognate translation equivalents) were used to directly compare L1 and L2
processing. Response latencies as well as eye movements representing early and late
processing were analyzed using mixed-effects regression modeling. Similar cross-linguistic
effects, namely cognate word frequency, phonological similarity, and semantic similarity,
were found in both languages. These factors affected processing to different degrees in each
language, however. While cognate frequency was significant as early as the first fixation,
effects of cross-linguistic phonological and semantic similarity arose later in time. Increased
phonological similarity slowed responses in L2 but speeded them in L1, while greater
semantic overlap was facilitatory in both languages. Results are discussed from the
perspective of the BIA+ model of visual word recognition.
Description
This article has been published in a revised form in Applied Psycholinguistics, http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0142716423000188. This version is free to view and download for private research and study only. Not for re-distribution, re-sale or use in derivative works. © The Authors, 2023.Identifier (Other)
DOI: 10.1017/S0142716423000188DOI: 10.25316/IR-19164