Late bilinguals often report less emotional involvement in their second language, a phenomenon called reduced emotional resonance in L2. The present study measured pupil dilation in response to high- versus low-arousing words (e.g., riot vs. swamp) in German-English and Finnish-English late bilinguals, both in their first and in their second language. A third sample of English monolingual speakers (tested only in English) served as a control group. To improve on previous research, we controlled for lexical confounds such as length, frequency, emotional valence, and abstractness-both within and across languages. Results showed no appreciable differences in post-trial word recognition judgements (98% recognition on average), but reliably stro...
Foreign languages are often learned in emotionally neutral academic environments which differ greatl...
Despite the subjective experience of many bilingual individuals that first-language content is more ...
Affective words seem to be processed differently than neutral words. A number of eye-tracking studie...
Late bilinguals often report less emotional involvement in their second language, a phenomenon calle...
This thesis presents an investigation on the emotional impact of bilingual speakers’ first (L1) and ...
Effects of emotion on word processing are well established in monolingual speakers. However, studies...
Emotion words seem to be processed differently than neutral words. A number of eye-tracking studies ...
The processing of foreign languages is suggested to be governed by certain levels of emotional dista...
While the evidence for impoverished emotional reactions of bilinguals in their weaker second languag...
<p>The hypothesis that word representations are emotionally impoverished in a second language (L2) h...
There is a great deal of evidence showing that, in monolinguals, various emotional stimuli are proce...
Late Finnish-English bilinguals were presented with neutral, positive, negative and taboo words in a...
There is a great deal of evidence showing that, in monolinguals, various emotional stimuli are proce...
Foreign languages are often learned in emotionally neutral academic environments which differ greatl...
As interest in cognitive sciences has grown over the years, language representation in the brain has...
Foreign languages are often learned in emotionally neutral academic environments which differ greatl...
Despite the subjective experience of many bilingual individuals that first-language content is more ...
Affective words seem to be processed differently than neutral words. A number of eye-tracking studie...
Late bilinguals often report less emotional involvement in their second language, a phenomenon calle...
This thesis presents an investigation on the emotional impact of bilingual speakers’ first (L1) and ...
Effects of emotion on word processing are well established in monolingual speakers. However, studies...
Emotion words seem to be processed differently than neutral words. A number of eye-tracking studies ...
The processing of foreign languages is suggested to be governed by certain levels of emotional dista...
While the evidence for impoverished emotional reactions of bilinguals in their weaker second languag...
<p>The hypothesis that word representations are emotionally impoverished in a second language (L2) h...
There is a great deal of evidence showing that, in monolinguals, various emotional stimuli are proce...
Late Finnish-English bilinguals were presented with neutral, positive, negative and taboo words in a...
There is a great deal of evidence showing that, in monolinguals, various emotional stimuli are proce...
Foreign languages are often learned in emotionally neutral academic environments which differ greatl...
As interest in cognitive sciences has grown over the years, language representation in the brain has...
Foreign languages are often learned in emotionally neutral academic environments which differ greatl...
Despite the subjective experience of many bilingual individuals that first-language content is more ...
Affective words seem to be processed differently than neutral words. A number of eye-tracking studie...