Literature DB >> 28407510

Implicit co-activation of American Sign Language in deaf readers: An ERP study.

Gabriela Meade1, Katherine J Midgley2, Zed Sevcikova Sehyr3, Phillip J Holcomb2, Karen Emmorey3.   

Abstract

In an implicit phonological priming paradigm, deaf bimodal bilinguals made semantic relatedness decisions for pairs of English words. Half of the semantically unrelated pairs had phonologically related translations in American Sign Language (ASL). As in previous studies with unimodal bilinguals, targets in pairs with phonologically related translations elicited smaller negativities than targets in pairs with phonologically unrelated translations within the N400 window. This suggests that the same lexicosemantic mechanism underlies implicit co-activation of a non-target language, irrespective of language modality. In contrast to unimodal bilingual studies that find no behavioral effects, we observed phonological interference, indicating that bimodal bilinguals may not suppress the non-target language as robustly. Further, there was a subset of bilinguals who were aware of the ASL manipulation (determined by debrief), and they exhibited an effect of ASL phonology in a later time window (700-900ms). Overall, these results indicate modality-independent language co-activation that persists longer for bimodal bilinguals.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  American Sign Language; Bimodal bilingualism; Implicit phonological priming; N400

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28407510      PMCID: PMC5538318          DOI: 10.1016/j.bandl.2017.03.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Lang        ISSN: 0093-934X            Impact factor:   2.381


  24 in total

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