Using a masked phonological priming paradigm, Brysbaert, Van Dyck, and Van de Poel (1999) showed that Dutch-French bilinguals perform better at identifying tachistoscopically presented L2 words (e.g., oui [yes]) when those words are primed by L1 words or nonwords that are homophonic to the L2 target word according to the L1 grapheme-phoneme conversion rules (e.g., wie [who]). They noted that this priming effect was smaller for balanced bilinguals than for less proficient bilinguals, although the interaction failed to reach significance. Findings of Gollan, Forster, and Frost (1997) suggest that this could be attributed to a greater reliance on phonology in L2 reading, caused by a smaller proficiency in this language. However, in this study ...
Children who have knowledge of two languages may show better phonological awareness than their monol...
Research on multilingual lexical organization is coming to a consensus, led by a growing body of stu...
A still unresolved issue is in how far native language (L1) processing in bilinguals is influenced b...
Using a masked phonological priming paradigm, Brysbaert, Van Dyck and Van de Poel (1999) showed that...
In this study, the authors show that cross-lingual phonological priming is possible not only from th...
The present study investigated cross-language priming effects with unique noncognate translation pai...
In studies of bilingual word recognition with masked priming, first language (L1) primes activate th...
A number of recent developments in the research on bilingualism and visual word recognition have con...
The aim of the current study was to explore wh...
A growing consensus in bilingual lexical processing research sees the bilingual lexicon as a non-se...
This experiment shows that recent experience in one language influences subsequent processing of the...
The ability to use multiple languages selectively is an impressive feat of the human information pro...
To investigate how orthography and semantics interact during bilingual visual word recognition, Dutc...
Contains fulltext : 86549.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)If access to the...
The present study investigated orthographic and phonological processing in L2 French spoken word rec...
Children who have knowledge of two languages may show better phonological awareness than their monol...
Research on multilingual lexical organization is coming to a consensus, led by a growing body of stu...
A still unresolved issue is in how far native language (L1) processing in bilinguals is influenced b...
Using a masked phonological priming paradigm, Brysbaert, Van Dyck and Van de Poel (1999) showed that...
In this study, the authors show that cross-lingual phonological priming is possible not only from th...
The present study investigated cross-language priming effects with unique noncognate translation pai...
In studies of bilingual word recognition with masked priming, first language (L1) primes activate th...
A number of recent developments in the research on bilingualism and visual word recognition have con...
The aim of the current study was to explore wh...
A growing consensus in bilingual lexical processing research sees the bilingual lexicon as a non-se...
This experiment shows that recent experience in one language influences subsequent processing of the...
The ability to use multiple languages selectively is an impressive feat of the human information pro...
To investigate how orthography and semantics interact during bilingual visual word recognition, Dutc...
Contains fulltext : 86549.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)If access to the...
The present study investigated orthographic and phonological processing in L2 French spoken word rec...
Children who have knowledge of two languages may show better phonological awareness than their monol...
Research on multilingual lexical organization is coming to a consensus, led by a growing body of stu...
A still unresolved issue is in how far native language (L1) processing in bilinguals is influenced b...