Bilinguals have two languages that are activated in parallel. During speech production, one of these languages must be selected on the basis of some cue. The present study investigated whether the face of an interlocutor can serve as such a cue. Spanish-Catalan and Dutch-French bilinguals were first familiarized with certain faces, each of which was associated with only one language, during simulated Skype conversations. Afterward, these participants performed a language production task in which they generated words associated with the words produced by familiar and unfamiliar faces displayed on-screen. When responding to familiar faces, participants produced words faster if the faces were speaking the same language as in the previous...
International audienceSeveral studies have shown that concepts spread activation to words of both of...
International audienceWe examined language-switching effects in French-English bilinguals using a pa...
It is known that bilingual infants can separate languages based on linguistic cues and silent faces....
Bilinguals have two languages that are activated in parallel. During speech production, one of these...
Early linguistic experience has an impact on the way we decode audiovisual speech in face-to-face co...
Here we investigated how the language in which a person addresses us, native or foreign, influences ...
International audienceEarly linguistic experience has an impact on the way we decode audiovisual spe...
Eye-gaze stimuli can elicit orienting of attention in an observer, a phenomenon known as gaze cueing...
Does language categorization influence face identification? The present study addressed this questio...
Contains fulltext : 86549.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)If access to the...
A talking face provides redundant cues on the mouth that might support language learning and highly ...
International audienceBetween 6 and 9 months, while infant’s ability to discriminate faces within th...
Recent research suggests that language plays a critical role in social categorization. Furthermore, ...
Abstract This research analyzed facial mimicry responses in two groups of Spanish-English bilinguals...
The masked priming paradigm appears to hold particular promise for the investigation of lexical acce...
International audienceSeveral studies have shown that concepts spread activation to words of both of...
International audienceWe examined language-switching effects in French-English bilinguals using a pa...
It is known that bilingual infants can separate languages based on linguistic cues and silent faces....
Bilinguals have two languages that are activated in parallel. During speech production, one of these...
Early linguistic experience has an impact on the way we decode audiovisual speech in face-to-face co...
Here we investigated how the language in which a person addresses us, native or foreign, influences ...
International audienceEarly linguistic experience has an impact on the way we decode audiovisual spe...
Eye-gaze stimuli can elicit orienting of attention in an observer, a phenomenon known as gaze cueing...
Does language categorization influence face identification? The present study addressed this questio...
Contains fulltext : 86549.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)If access to the...
A talking face provides redundant cues on the mouth that might support language learning and highly ...
International audienceBetween 6 and 9 months, while infant’s ability to discriminate faces within th...
Recent research suggests that language plays a critical role in social categorization. Furthermore, ...
Abstract This research analyzed facial mimicry responses in two groups of Spanish-English bilinguals...
The masked priming paradigm appears to hold particular promise for the investigation of lexical acce...
International audienceSeveral studies have shown that concepts spread activation to words of both of...
International audienceWe examined language-switching effects in French-English bilinguals using a pa...
It is known that bilingual infants can separate languages based on linguistic cues and silent faces....