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Cross-language neighborhood density effects in early and late bilingual word recognition
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2015
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A central debate in research involving bilinguals is related to how the languages possessed
by bilinguals interact while orthographic processing of one language occurs. Past research
suggests that there is influence from a bilingual’s non-relevant language when she or he is
processing words in the other language. One way of measuring such influence is achieved
by varying the number of orthographic neighbors between languages and measuring the
difference in reaction times to words with many and fewer cross-language neighbors. In
this study, early and late English-Spanish bilinguals, who differed in experiences with their
languages, responded to English and Spanish words in a progressive demasking task that
differed by the number of orthographic neighbors (many or none) present in the other
language. As expected, English words with many cross-language Spanish neighbors were
responded to more slowly than English words with no cross-language Spanish neighbors.
However, there was no significant difference in reaction times to Spanish words with many
or no cross-language neighbors in English, which was unexpected. This pattern was similar
in the two groups of bilinguals. Similar results were obtained in a control experiment with
monolingual, English-speaking individuals, which suggests that the results obtained from
the bilingual study might be due to some uncontrolled lexical variable (e.g., low
imageability of specific English words with many Spanish neighbors).
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