Previous research has shown that when speakers produce words in their second language (L2), they also activate the phonological form of the translation of the word in their first language (L1). Here we investigated whether this holds in the opposite direction, i.e. when participants speak in exclusively in their L1. In a picture-word interference task, speakers named pictures in their L1 Dutch ("mes" [knife]) while ignoring L2 English auditory distractors phonologically related to the English translation of the target ("knight") or unrelated ("plane"). Naming latencies were longer in the related compared to the unrelated condition, suggesting that the L2 translations were activated up to the phonological level. However, this pattern was onl...
Contains fulltext : 90288.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Language switchi...
<p>A still unresolved issue is in how far native language (L1) processing in bilinguals is influence...
There are multiple theoretical standpoints in Second Language Acquisition and the debate between the...
Previous research has shown that when speakers produce words in their second language (L2), they als...
Contains fulltext : 193125.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Previous resear...
Contains fulltext : 129262.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In two picture-...
Second language (L2) speakers produce speech more slowly than first language (L1) speakers. This may...
International audienceIn this study we explored the temporal origin of processing differences betwee...
The research investigated whether a bilinguals’ second language (L2) is activated during a task invo...
L1 influences on L2 learning and use are phenomena vastlydocumented in L2 learning research (ODLIN, ...
International audienceLevy, Mc Veigh, Marful and Andreson (2007) found that naming pictures in L2 im...
Bilinguals are slower when naming a picture in their second language than when naming it in their fi...
A still unresolved issue is in how far native language (L1) processing in bilinguals is influenced b...
We present a critical examination of phonological effects in a picture-word interference task. Using...
Contains fulltext : 90288.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Language switchi...
<p>A still unresolved issue is in how far native language (L1) processing in bilinguals is influence...
There are multiple theoretical standpoints in Second Language Acquisition and the debate between the...
Previous research has shown that when speakers produce words in their second language (L2), they als...
Contains fulltext : 193125.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Previous resear...
Contains fulltext : 129262.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In two picture-...
Second language (L2) speakers produce speech more slowly than first language (L1) speakers. This may...
International audienceIn this study we explored the temporal origin of processing differences betwee...
The research investigated whether a bilinguals’ second language (L2) is activated during a task invo...
L1 influences on L2 learning and use are phenomena vastlydocumented in L2 learning research (ODLIN, ...
International audienceLevy, Mc Veigh, Marful and Andreson (2007) found that naming pictures in L2 im...
Bilinguals are slower when naming a picture in their second language than when naming it in their fi...
A still unresolved issue is in how far native language (L1) processing in bilinguals is influenced b...
We present a critical examination of phonological effects in a picture-word interference task. Using...
Contains fulltext : 90288.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Language switchi...
<p>A still unresolved issue is in how far native language (L1) processing in bilinguals is influence...
There are multiple theoretical standpoints in Second Language Acquisition and the debate between the...