Literature DB >> 29056862

Recent language experience influences cross-language activation in bilinguals with different scripts.

Chuchu Li1, Min Wang2, Candise Y Lin3.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: This study aimed to examine whether the phonological information in the non-target language is activated and its influence on bilingual processing. APPROACH: Using the Stroop paradigm, Mandarin-English bilinguals named the ink color of Chinese characters in English in Experiment 1 and named the Chinese characters in addition to the color naming in English in Experiment 2. Twenty-four participants were recruited in each experiment. In both experiments, the visual stimuli included color characters (e.g. , hong2, red), homophones of the color characters (e.g. , hong2, flood), characters that only shared the same syllable segment with the color characters (S+T-, e.g. , hong1, boom), characters that shared the same tone but differed in segments with the color characters (S-T+, e.g. , ping2, bottle), and neutral characters (e.g. , qian1, leading through). DATA AND ANALYSIS: Planned t-tests were conducted in which participants' naming accuracy rate and naming latency in each phonological condition were compared with the neutral condition.
FINDINGS: Experiment 1 only showed the classic Stroop effect in the color character condition. In Experiment 2, in addition to the classic Stroop effect, the congruent homophone condition (e.g. in red) showed a significant Stroop interference effect. These results suggested that for bilingual speakers with different scripts, phonological information in the non-target language may not be automatically activated even though the written words in the non-target language were visually presented. However, if the phonological information of the non-target language is activated in advance, it could lead to competition between the two languages, likely at both the phonological and lemma levels. ORIGINALITY AND SIGNIFICANCE: This study is among the first to investigate whether the translation of a word is phonologically encoded in bilinguals using the Stroop paradigm. The findings improve our understanding of the underlying mechanism of bilingual processing.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Phonology; bilingual; cross-language activation; different script; language experience

Year:  2016        PMID: 29056862      PMCID: PMC5649636          DOI: 10.1177/1367006916635837

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Billing        ISSN: 1367-0069


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