The ability to use multiple languages selectively is an impressive feat of the human information processing system. Although bilinguals scarcely commit random cross-language errors when they speak, there is evidence that both languages are active when one is in use
Systematic psycholinguistic research has considered the nature of the coexistence of two (or more) l...
Systematic psycholinguistic research has considered the nature of the coexistence of two (or more) l...
Using a masked phonological priming paradigm, Brysbaert, Van Dyck and Van de Poel (1999) showed that...
A monolingual and a bilingual primed lexical decision task were used to investigate priming effects...
A growing consensus in bilingual lexical processing research sees the bilingual lexicon as a non-se...
Item does not contain fulltextAlthough research has consistently shown that a bilingual's two langua...
Although bilingual speakers are very good at selectively using one language rather than another, som...
A fundamental question about bilinguals ’ ability to translate words between two languages is whethe...
In studies of bilingual word recognition with masked priming, first language (L1) primes activate th...
Systematic psycholinguistic research has considered the nature of the coexistence of two (or more) l...
Although research has consistently shown that a bilingual's two languages interact on multiple level...
An aim of research on bilingualism is to understand how the brain adapts to the use of more than one...
Bilingualism has been studied extensively in multiple disciplines, yet we are still unsure how exact...
How do bilinguals control which language they use when they speak? D. Green’s inhibitory control (IC...
Research on multilingual lexical organization is coming to a consensus, led by a growing body of stu...
Systematic psycholinguistic research has considered the nature of the coexistence of two (or more) l...
Systematic psycholinguistic research has considered the nature of the coexistence of two (or more) l...
Using a masked phonological priming paradigm, Brysbaert, Van Dyck and Van de Poel (1999) showed that...
A monolingual and a bilingual primed lexical decision task were used to investigate priming effects...
A growing consensus in bilingual lexical processing research sees the bilingual lexicon as a non-se...
Item does not contain fulltextAlthough research has consistently shown that a bilingual's two langua...
Although bilingual speakers are very good at selectively using one language rather than another, som...
A fundamental question about bilinguals ’ ability to translate words between two languages is whethe...
In studies of bilingual word recognition with masked priming, first language (L1) primes activate th...
Systematic psycholinguistic research has considered the nature of the coexistence of two (or more) l...
Although research has consistently shown that a bilingual's two languages interact on multiple level...
An aim of research on bilingualism is to understand how the brain adapts to the use of more than one...
Bilingualism has been studied extensively in multiple disciplines, yet we are still unsure how exact...
How do bilinguals control which language they use when they speak? D. Green’s inhibitory control (IC...
Research on multilingual lexical organization is coming to a consensus, led by a growing body of stu...
Systematic psycholinguistic research has considered the nature of the coexistence of two (or more) l...
Systematic psycholinguistic research has considered the nature of the coexistence of two (or more) l...
Using a masked phonological priming paradigm, Brysbaert, Van Dyck and Van de Poel (1999) showed that...