| Literature DB >> 25058411 |
Katharina Spalek1, Noriko Hoshino2, Yan Jing Wu3, Markus Damian4, Guillaume Thierry5.
Abstract
Bilingualism research has established language non-selective lexical access in comprehension. However, the evidence for such an effect in production remains sparse and its neural time-course has not yet been investigated. We demonstrate that German-English bilinguals performing a simple picture-naming task exclusively in English spontaneously access the phonological form of -unproduced- German words. Participants were asked to produce English adjective-noun sequences describing the colour and identity of familiar objects presented as line drawings. We associated adjective and picture names such that their onsets phonologically overlapped in English (e.g., green goat), in German through translation (e.g., blue flower - 'blaue Blume'), or in neither language. As expected, phonological priming in English modulated event-related brain potentials over the frontocentral scalp region from around 440ms after picture onset. Phonological priming in German was detectable even earlier, from 300ms, even though German was never produced and in the absence of an interaction between language and phonological repetition priming at any point in time. Overall, these results establish the existence of non-selective access to phonological representations of the two languages in the domain of speech production.Entities:
Keywords: Bilingualism; Event-related potentials; Lexical access; Phonological co-activation; Speech
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25058411 DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2014.06.016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cognition ISSN: 0010-0277