Non-selective lexical access in bilinguals is spontaneous and independent of input monitoring: evidence from eye tracking
Non-selective lexical access in bilinguals is spontaneous and independent of input monitoring: evidence from eye tracking
Language non-selective lexical access in bilinguals has been established mainly using tasks requiring explicit language processing. Here, we show that bilinguals activate native language translations even when words presented in their second language are incidentally processed in a nonverbal, visual search task. Chinese-English bilinguals searched for strings of circles or squares presented together with three English words (i.e., distracters) within a 4-item grid. In the experimental trials, all four locations were occupied by English words, including a critical word that phonologically overlapped with the Chinese word for circle or square when translated into Chinese. The eye-tracking results show that, in the experimental trials, bilinguals looked more frequently and longer at critical than control words, a pattern that was absent in English monolingual controls. We conclude that incidental word processing activates lexical representations of both languages of bilinguals, even when the task does not require explicit language processing.
Bilingualism, Eye movements, Language, Lexical access, Visual search
418-425
Wu, Yan Jing
17512290-4dbb-44a9-a7a7-b562227d0c06
Cristino, Filipe
b47224fa-e770-4e31-9371-4737be3e1e50
Leek, Charles
6f63c405-e28f-4f8c-8ead-3b0a79c7dc88
Thierry, Guillaume
5e0abb7f-7123-4936-a010-3eeb855b2448
1 November 2013
Wu, Yan Jing
17512290-4dbb-44a9-a7a7-b562227d0c06
Cristino, Filipe
b47224fa-e770-4e31-9371-4737be3e1e50
Leek, Charles
6f63c405-e28f-4f8c-8ead-3b0a79c7dc88
Thierry, Guillaume
5e0abb7f-7123-4936-a010-3eeb855b2448
Wu, Yan Jing, Cristino, Filipe, Leek, Charles and Thierry, Guillaume
(2013)
Non-selective lexical access in bilinguals is spontaneous and independent of input monitoring: evidence from eye tracking.
Cognition, 129 (2), .
(doi:10.1016/j.cognition.2013.08.005).
Abstract
Language non-selective lexical access in bilinguals has been established mainly using tasks requiring explicit language processing. Here, we show that bilinguals activate native language translations even when words presented in their second language are incidentally processed in a nonverbal, visual search task. Chinese-English bilinguals searched for strings of circles or squares presented together with three English words (i.e., distracters) within a 4-item grid. In the experimental trials, all four locations were occupied by English words, including a critical word that phonologically overlapped with the Chinese word for circle or square when translated into Chinese. The eye-tracking results show that, in the experimental trials, bilinguals looked more frequently and longer at critical than control words, a pattern that was absent in English monolingual controls. We conclude that incidental word processing activates lexical representations of both languages of bilinguals, even when the task does not require explicit language processing.
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Published date: 1 November 2013
Keywords:
Bilingualism, Eye movements, Language, Lexical access, Visual search
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 494017
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494017
ISSN: 0010-0277
PURE UUID: a70299d7-1096-4ee7-aae6-2f52cc1a1ade
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Date deposited: 19 Sep 2024 16:49
Last modified: 21 Sep 2024 02:13
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Contributors
Author:
Yan Jing Wu
Author:
Filipe Cristino
Author:
Charles Leek
Author:
Guillaume Thierry
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