What Absent Switch Costs and Mixing Costs During Bilingual Language Comprehension Can Tell Us About Language Control

被引:49
|
作者
Declerck, Mathieu [1 ,2 ]
Koch, Iring [3 ]
Andoni Dunabeitia, Jon [4 ,5 ]
Grainger, Jonathan [1 ,2 ]
Stephan, Denise N. [3 ]
机构
[1] Aix Marseille Univ, Lab Psychol Cognit, Marseille, France
[2] CNRS, Marseille, France
[3] Rhein Westfal TH Aachen, Inst Psychol, Aachen, Germany
[4] Univ Nebrija, Fac Lenguas & Educ, Donostia San Sebastian, Spain
[5] Basque Ctr Cognit Brain & Language, Donostia San Sebastian, Spain
关键词
bilingualism; language comprehension; language control; switch costs; mixing costs; LEXICAL ACCESS; SPEECH PRODUCTION; EXECUTIVE CONTROL; BRAIN POTENTIALS; NATIVE LANGUAGE; CROSS-TALK; TASK; ACTIVATION; INHIBITION; WORD;
D O I
10.1037/xhp0000627
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
In the current study, we set out to investigate language control, which is the process that minimizes cross-language interference, during bilingual language comprehension. According to current theories of bilingual language comprehension, language-switch costs, which are a marker for reactive language control, should be observed. However, a closer look at the literature shows that this is not always the case. Furthermore, little to no evidence for language-mixing costs, which are a marker for proactive language control, has been observed in the bilingual language comprehension literature. This is in line with current theories of bilingual language comprehension, as they do not explicitly account for proactive language control. In the current study, we further investigated these two markers of language control and found no evidence for comprehension-based language-switch costs in six experiments, even though other types of switch costs were observed with the exact same setup (i.e., task-switch costs, stimulus modality-switch costs, and production-based language-switch costs). Furthermore, only one out of three experiments showed comprehension-based language-mixing costs, providing the first tentative evidence for proactive language control during bilingual language comprehension. The implications of the absence and occurrence of these costs are discussed in terms of processing speed and parallel language activation. Public Significance Statement This study indicates that switching languages, during bilingual language comprehension, is not always more difficult than staying in the same language. This indicates that bilinguals do not necessarily need to control for cross-language interference during bilingual language comprehension.
引用
收藏
页码:771 / 789
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] What animals can tell us about attentional prerequisites of language acquisition
    Leavens, David A.
    Elsherif, Mahmoud M.
    Clark, Hannah
    LANGUAGE & COMMUNICATION, 2023, 92 : 55 - 73
  • [22] What can Speech and Language Tell us About the Working Alliance in Psychotherapy
    Bayerl, S. P.
    Roccabruna, G.
    Chowdhury, S. A.
    Ciulli, T.
    Danieli, M.
    Riedhammer, K.
    Riccardi, G.
    INTERSPEECH 2022, 2022, : 2443 - 2447
  • [23] What aDNA can (and cannot) tell us about the emergence of language and speech
    DeSalle, Rob
    Tattersall, Ian
    JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE EVOLUTION, 2018, 3 (01) : 59 - 66
  • [24] What Can the Language of Musicians Tell Us about Music Interaction Design?
    Wilkie, Katie
    Holland, Simon
    Mulholland, Paul
    COMPUTER MUSIC JOURNAL, 2010, 34 (04) : 34 - 48
  • [25] What can adult speech tell us about child language acquisition?
    Sloos, Marjoleine
    Van de Weijer, Jeroen
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF LINGUISTICS-REVUE CANADIENNE DE LINGUISTIQUE, 2015, 60 (01): : 75 - 83
  • [26] What developmental disorders can tell us about the nature and origins of language
    Gary Marcus
    Hugh Rabagliati
    Nature Neuroscience, 2006, 9 : 1226 - 1229
  • [27] What developmental disorders can tell us about the nature and origins of language
    Marcus, Gary
    Rabagliati, Hugh
    NATURE NEUROSCIENCE, 2006, 9 (10) : 1226 - 1229
  • [28] Asymmetrical Switch Costs in Bilingual Language Production Induced by Reading Words
    Peeters, David
    Runnqvist, Elin
    Bertrand, Daisy
    Grainger, Jonathan
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2014, 40 (01) : 284 - 292
  • [29] WHAT CAN COMPUTER-SYNTHESIZED SPEECH TELL US ABOUT LANGUAGE COMPREHENSION IMPAIRMENT OF ADULTS WITH RESIDUAL DYSPHASIA
    TALLAL, P
    NEWCOMBE, F
    JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 1976, 59 : S85 - S85
  • [30] Predictive language processing: integrating comprehension and production, and what atypical populations can tell us
    Gastaldon, Simone
    Bonfiglio, Noemi
    Vespignani, Francesco
    Peressotti, Francesca
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2024, 15