Publication
Title
Effects of phonological feedback on the selection of syntax : evidence from between-language syntactic priming
Author
Abstract
Research on word production in bilinguals has often shown an advantage for cognate words. According to some accounts, this cognate effect is caused by feedback from a level that represents information about phonemes (or graphemes) to a level concerned with the word. In order to investigate whether phonological feedback influences the selection of words and syntactic constructions in late bilinguals, we investigated syntactic priming between Dutch and English genitive constructions (e.g., the fork of the girl vs. the girl's fork). The head nouns of prime and target constructions were always translation equivalents. Half of these were Dutch-English cognates with a large phonological overlap (e.g., vork-fork), the other half were non-cognates that had very few phonemes in common (e.g., eend-duck). Cognate status boosted between-language syntactic priming. Further analyses showed a continuous effect of phonological overlap for cognates and non-cognates, indicating that this boost was at least partly caused by feedback from the translation equivalents' shared phonemes.
Language
English
Source (journal)
Bilingualism : language and cognition. - Cambridge, 1998, currens
Publication
Cambridge : 2012
ISSN
1366-7289 [print]
1469-1841 [online]
DOI
10.1017/S1366728911000162
Volume/pages
15 :3 (2012) , p. 503-516
ISI
000304600400005
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
Full text (publisher's version - intranet only)
UAntwerpen
Research group
Publication type
Subject
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 15.04.2019
Last edited 30.08.2024
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