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Frequency effects in monolingual and bilingual natural reading

Frequency effects in monolingual and bilingual natural reading
Frequency effects in monolingual and bilingual natural reading
This paper presents the first systematic examination of the monolingual and bilingual frequency effect (FE) during natural reading. We analyzed single fixation durations on content words for participants reading an entire novel. Unbalanced bilinguals and monolinguals show a similarly sized FE in their mother tongue (L1), but for bilinguals the FE is considerably larger in their second language (L2) than in their L1. The FE in both L1 and L2 reading decreased with increasing L1 proficiency, but it was not affected by L2 proficiency. Our results are consistent with an account of bilingual language processing that assumes an integrated mental lexicon with exposure as the main determiner for lexical entrenchment. This means that no qualitative difference in language processing between monolingual, bilingual L1, or bilingual L2 is necessary to explain reading behavior. We present this account and argue that not all groups of bilinguals necessarily have lower L1 exposure than mono- linguals do and, in line with Kuperman and Van Dyke (Journal of Experimental Psychology, 39 (3), 802-823, 2013), that individual vocabulary size and language exposure change the accuracy of the relative corpus word frequencies and thereby determine the size of the FEs in the same way for all participants.
eye movements and reading, psycholinguistics, visual word recognition
1216-1234
Cop, Uschi
50363f77-a11c-4199-a44b-71aab62dc94a
Keuleers, Emmanuel
98381f30-042e-4244-ae9f-807cd46b5d43
Drieghe, Denis
dfe41922-1cea-47f4-904b-26d5c9fe85ce
Duyck, Wouter
dce2ef96-666c-4871-9e85-ec0087c4a8b7
Cop, Uschi
50363f77-a11c-4199-a44b-71aab62dc94a
Keuleers, Emmanuel
98381f30-042e-4244-ae9f-807cd46b5d43
Drieghe, Denis
dfe41922-1cea-47f4-904b-26d5c9fe85ce
Duyck, Wouter
dce2ef96-666c-4871-9e85-ec0087c4a8b7

Cop, Uschi, Keuleers, Emmanuel, Drieghe, Denis and Duyck, Wouter (2015) Frequency effects in monolingual and bilingual natural reading. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 22 (5), 1216-1234. (doi:10.3758/s13423-015-0819-2).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper presents the first systematic examination of the monolingual and bilingual frequency effect (FE) during natural reading. We analyzed single fixation durations on content words for participants reading an entire novel. Unbalanced bilinguals and monolinguals show a similarly sized FE in their mother tongue (L1), but for bilinguals the FE is considerably larger in their second language (L2) than in their L1. The FE in both L1 and L2 reading decreased with increasing L1 proficiency, but it was not affected by L2 proficiency. Our results are consistent with an account of bilingual language processing that assumes an integrated mental lexicon with exposure as the main determiner for lexical entrenchment. This means that no qualitative difference in language processing between monolingual, bilingual L1, or bilingual L2 is necessary to explain reading behavior. We present this account and argue that not all groups of bilinguals necessarily have lower L1 exposure than mono- linguals do and, in line with Kuperman and Van Dyke (Journal of Experimental Psychology, 39 (3), 802-823, 2013), that individual vocabulary size and language exposure change the accuracy of the relative corpus word frequencies and thereby determine the size of the FEs in the same way for all participants.

Text
Cop, Keuleers, Drieghe & Duyck (2015).pdf - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Published date: April 2015
Keywords: eye movements and reading, psycholinguistics, visual word recognition

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 382041
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/382041
PURE UUID: ced752a0-3f9e-40ed-8af0-915c03b488ed
ORCID for Denis Drieghe: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9630-8410

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Date deposited: 19 Oct 2015 12:57
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:34

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Contributors

Author: Uschi Cop
Author: Emmanuel Keuleers
Author: Denis Drieghe ORCID iD
Author: Wouter Duyck

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