| Literature DB >> 28785168 |
Marcel R Giezen1, Karen Emmorey2.
Abstract
Many bimodal bilinguals are immersed in a spoken language-dominant environment from an early age and, unlike unimodal bilinguals, do not necessarily divide their language use between languages. Nonetheless, early ASL-English bilinguals retrieved fewer words in a letter fluency task in their dominant language compared to monolingual English speakers with equal vocabulary level. This finding demonstrates that reduced vocabulary size and/or frequency of use cannot completely account for bilingual disadvantages in verbal fluency. Instead, retrieval difficulties likely reflect between-language interference. Furthermore, it suggests that the two languages of bilinguals compete for selection even when they are expressed with distinct articulators.Entities:
Keywords: bimodal bilingualism; lexical retrieval; verbal fluency; vocabulary
Year: 2016 PMID: 28785168 PMCID: PMC5544419 DOI: 10.1017/S1366728916000596
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biling (Camb Engl) ISSN: 1366-7289