Why is lexical retrieval slower for bilinguals? Evidence from picture naming.

Sullivan MD, Poarch GJ, Bialystok E

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Proficient bilinguals demonstrate slower lexical retrieval than comparable monolinguals. The present study tested predictions from two main accounts of this effect, the frequency-lag and competition hypotheses. Both make the same prediction for bilinguals but differ for trilinguals and for age differences. 200 younger or older adults who were monolingual, bilingual, or trilingual performed a picture naming task in English that included high and low frequency words. Naming times were faster for high than for low frequency words and, in line with frequency lag, group differences were larger for low than high frequency items. However, on all other measures, bilinguals and trilinguals performed equivalently, and lexical retrieval differences between language groups did not attenuate with age, consistent with the competition view.

Details about the publication

Volume21
Issue3
StatusPublished
Release year2018 (26/12/2017)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1017/S1366728917000694
KeywordsMultilingualism; Aging; Picture naming; Word frequency; Lexical retrieval

Authors from the University of Münster

Poarch, Gregory
Juniorprofessur für Erwerb des Englischen als Drittsprache (Prof. Poarch)