Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
920172 Acta Psychologica 2011 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

The present study explored whether language-nonselective access in bilinguals occurs across word classes in a sentence context. Dutch–English bilinguals were auditorily presented with English (L2) sentences while looking at a visual world. The sentences contained interlingual homophones from distinct lexical categories (e.g., the English verb spoke, which overlaps phonologically with the Dutch noun for ghost, spook). Eye movement recordings showed that depictions of referents of the Dutch (L1) nouns attracted more visual attention than unrelated distractor pictures in sentences containing homophones. This finding shows that native language objects are activated during second language verb processing despite the structural information provided by the sentence context.

Research highlights► We show that native language words are activated during second language sentence processing. ► We tested this in a visual world setting on homophones with a different word class across languages. ► Fixations show that processing second language verbs activated native language nouns.

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