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Kaushanskaya, Margarita – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2012
Previous studies have indicated that bilingualism may facilitate lexical learning in adults. The goals of this research were (i) to examine whether bilingual influences on word learning diverge for phonologically-familiar and phonologically-unfamiliar novel words, and (ii) to examine whether increased phonological memory capacity can account for…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Monolingualism, Memory, Cognitive Ability
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Moon, Jihye; Jiang, Nan – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2012
Lexical access in bilinguals is known to be largely non-selective. However, most studies in this area have involved bilinguals whose two languages share the same script. This study aimed to examine bilingual lexical access among bilinguals whose two languages have distinct scripts. Korean-English bilinguals were tested in a phoneme monitoring task…
Descriptors: Written Language, Language Dominance, Monolingualism, Bilingualism
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Coderre, Emily L.; Van Heuven, Walter J. B.; Conklin, Kathy – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2013
Executive control abilities and lexical access speed in Stroop performance were investigated in English monolinguals and two groups of bilinguals (English-Chinese and Chinese-English) in their first (L1) and second (L2) languages. Predictions were based on a bilingual cognitive advantage hypothesis, implicating cognitive control ability as the…
Descriptors: Interference (Language), Bilingualism, Native Language, Color
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Simard, Daphnee; Fortier, Veronique; Foucambert, Denis – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2013
"Metasyntactic Ability" (MSA) refers to the conscious reflection about syntactic aspects of language and the deliberate control of these aspects (Gombert, 1992). It appears from previous studies that heritage-language learners tend to demonstrate lower MSA than their monolingual counterparts (Lesaux & Siegel, 2003). In the present study, we…
Descriptors: Measurement, English (Second Language), Reading Comprehension, Reflection
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Rothweiler, Monika; Chilla, Solveig; Clahsen, Harald – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2012
This study investigates phenomena that have been claimed to be indicative of Specific Language Impairment (SLI) in German, focusing on subject-verb agreement marking. Longitudinal data from fourteen German-speaking children with SLI, seven monolingual and seven Turkish-German successive bilingual children, were examined. We found similar patterns…
Descriptors: Sentences, Speech Communication, Verbs, Language Impairments
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Chakraborty, Rahul – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2011
This paper examines the influence of age of immersion and proficiency in a second language on speech movement consistency in both a first and a second language. Ten monolingual speakers of English and 20 Bengali-English bilinguals (10 with low L2 proficiency and 10 with high L2 proficiency) participated. Lip movement variability was assessed based…
Descriptors: Sentences, Second Language Learning, Language Proficiency, Monolingualism
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Chondrogianni, Vasiliki; Marinis, Theodoros – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2012
This study investigates the production and online processing of English tense morphemes by sequential bilingual (L2) Turkish-speaking children with more than three years of exposure to English. Thirty-nine six- to nine-year-old L2 children and twenty-eight typically developing age-matched monolingual (L1) children were administered the production…
Descriptors: Sentences, Morphemes, Grammar, Language Impairments
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Bylund, Emanuel; Jarvis, Scott – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2011
The finding that speakers of aspect languages encode event endpoints to a lesser extent than do speakers of non-aspect languages has led to the hypothesis that there is a relationship between grammatical aspect and event conceptualization (e.g., von Stutterheim and Nuse, 2003). The present study concerns L1 event conceptualization in 40 L1…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Form Classes (Languages), Grammar, Motion
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Sekerina, Irina A.; Trueswell, John C. – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2011
Two eye-tracking experiments in the Visual World paradigm compared how monolingual Russian (Experiment 1) and heritage Russian-English bilingual (Experiment 2) listeners process contrastiveness online in Russian. Materials were color adjective-noun phrases embedded into the split-constituent construction Krasnuju polozite zvezdovku..."Red put…
Descriptors: Language Skill Attrition, Nouns, Word Recognition, Monolingualism