Models of bilingual speech production generally assume that translation equivalent lexical nodes share a common semantic representation. Though this type of architecture is highly desirable on both theoretical and empirical grounds, it could create difficulty at the point of lexical selection. If two translation equivalent lexical nodes are activated to roughly equal levels every time that their shared semantic representation becomes activated, the lexical selection mechanism should find it difficult to “decide” between the two (the “hard problem”) – yet in some cases bilinguals benefit from the presence of a translation equivalent “competitor”. In this article, we review three models that have been proposed as solutions to the hard problem...
Bilinguals have been shown to perform worse than monolinguals in a variety of verbal tasks. This stu...
According to the selection-by-competition model of bilingualism, individuals who know two languages...
For a long time, bilingualism was believed to involve the requirement of two separate word processin...
In this chapter we examine how bilinguals recognize and speak words in each of their two languages. ...
The present article explores the mechanisms of bilingual lexical access. That is to say, how bilingu...
The “hard problem ” in bilingual lexical access arises when translation-equivalent lexical represent...
In this article we discuss different views about how information flows through the lexical system in...
When bilinguals decide to speak in one of their languages, parallel activation from both of their la...
International audienceThis chapter focusses on models of language production and the temporal organi...
When bilinguals speak, do words from both languages compete for selection? Under one hypothesis of b...
A conversation between two people can only take place if the words intended by each speaker are succ...
1.1 General introduction One controversy in bilingual language processing research is whether indivi...
We report two experiments that investigate the effects of sentence context on bilingual lexical acce...
Research within the domain of bilingualism has grown exponentially within the past three decades, p...
Item does not contain fulltextCentral questions in psycholinguistic studies on bilingualism are how ...
Bilinguals have been shown to perform worse than monolinguals in a variety of verbal tasks. This stu...
According to the selection-by-competition model of bilingualism, individuals who know two languages...
For a long time, bilingualism was believed to involve the requirement of two separate word processin...
In this chapter we examine how bilinguals recognize and speak words in each of their two languages. ...
The present article explores the mechanisms of bilingual lexical access. That is to say, how bilingu...
The “hard problem ” in bilingual lexical access arises when translation-equivalent lexical represent...
In this article we discuss different views about how information flows through the lexical system in...
When bilinguals decide to speak in one of their languages, parallel activation from both of their la...
International audienceThis chapter focusses on models of language production and the temporal organi...
When bilinguals speak, do words from both languages compete for selection? Under one hypothesis of b...
A conversation between two people can only take place if the words intended by each speaker are succ...
1.1 General introduction One controversy in bilingual language processing research is whether indivi...
We report two experiments that investigate the effects of sentence context on bilingual lexical acce...
Research within the domain of bilingualism has grown exponentially within the past three decades, p...
Item does not contain fulltextCentral questions in psycholinguistic studies on bilingualism are how ...
Bilinguals have been shown to perform worse than monolinguals in a variety of verbal tasks. This stu...
According to the selection-by-competition model of bilingualism, individuals who know two languages...
For a long time, bilingualism was believed to involve the requirement of two separate word processin...