Bilingual Lexical Representation and Processing: Evidence from Masked Priming Studies

Most bilingual lexical models assume that L1 and L2 either share the same semantic system, or are distinguished at the semantic level but connected through lexical associations. For example, the Revised Hierarchical Model (Kroll & Stewart, 1994) assumes the stronger access from L2 to concepts vi...

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Main Author: Wang, Xin
Other Authors: Forster, Kenneth I.
Language:EN
Published: The University of Arizona. 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/195105
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1951052015-10-23T04:42:07Z Bilingual Lexical Representation and Processing: Evidence from Masked Priming Studies Wang, Xin Forster, Kenneth I. Forster, Kenneth I. Nicol, Janet L. Harley, Heidi Garret, Merrill Bilingualism Translation Priming L2 Proficiency Bilingual Processing and Representation L2 Word Recognition Masked Priming Most bilingual lexical models assume that L1 and L2 either share the same semantic system, or are distinguished at the semantic level but connected through lexical associations. For example, the Revised Hierarchical Model (Kroll & Stewart, 1994) assumes the stronger access from L2 to concepts via the L1 lexical representation at the early stage of L2 acquisition and direct access to concepts after L2 proficiency is achieved. However, the model is not well supported by subsequent empirical evidence, and encounters difficulty in explaining cross-language priming data. The recently developed Sense Model (Finkbeiner, M., Forster, K., Nicol, J., & Nakamura, K., 2004) assumes a direct access from the L2 form to its related meaning and argues for the representational asymmetry in lexical semantics between L1 and L2. This model was designed to account for the translation asymmetry and task effect in the masked priming literature: L2-L1 priming is not observed in lexical decision due to the small proportion of L1 senses activated by the L2 prime; however, the category provides a context which restricts L1 sense activation and thus enhances the effectiveness of the L2 prime in semantic categorization. This dissertation reports the results of several semantic categorization experiments designed to test several assumptions of the Sense Model. Experiments 1-4 investigated whether the Category Restriction Hypothesis assumed by the Sense Model was empirically supported when congruence effects are minimized. The results showed that translation priming could be obtained for exemplars when congruence effects were controlled, but that there were no effects for non-exemplars, as predicted by the Sense Model. Subsequent experiments showed that category size is an important variable, since L2-L1 priming was not obtained with large categories (e.g., living thing), which was taken to indicate that a large category is ineffective as a 'focusing' device to enhance the activation of L2 semantic senses. Finally, it was shown that the priming asymmetry in lexical decision was not due to differential degrees of semantic activation of the prime in L1 and L2. 2007 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/195105 659748415 2509 EN Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Bilingualism
Translation Priming
L2 Proficiency
Bilingual Processing and Representation
L2 Word Recognition
Masked Priming
spellingShingle Bilingualism
Translation Priming
L2 Proficiency
Bilingual Processing and Representation
L2 Word Recognition
Masked Priming
Wang, Xin
Bilingual Lexical Representation and Processing: Evidence from Masked Priming Studies
description Most bilingual lexical models assume that L1 and L2 either share the same semantic system, or are distinguished at the semantic level but connected through lexical associations. For example, the Revised Hierarchical Model (Kroll & Stewart, 1994) assumes the stronger access from L2 to concepts via the L1 lexical representation at the early stage of L2 acquisition and direct access to concepts after L2 proficiency is achieved. However, the model is not well supported by subsequent empirical evidence, and encounters difficulty in explaining cross-language priming data. The recently developed Sense Model (Finkbeiner, M., Forster, K., Nicol, J., & Nakamura, K., 2004) assumes a direct access from the L2 form to its related meaning and argues for the representational asymmetry in lexical semantics between L1 and L2. This model was designed to account for the translation asymmetry and task effect in the masked priming literature: L2-L1 priming is not observed in lexical decision due to the small proportion of L1 senses activated by the L2 prime; however, the category provides a context which restricts L1 sense activation and thus enhances the effectiveness of the L2 prime in semantic categorization. This dissertation reports the results of several semantic categorization experiments designed to test several assumptions of the Sense Model. Experiments 1-4 investigated whether the Category Restriction Hypothesis assumed by the Sense Model was empirically supported when congruence effects are minimized. The results showed that translation priming could be obtained for exemplars when congruence effects were controlled, but that there were no effects for non-exemplars, as predicted by the Sense Model. Subsequent experiments showed that category size is an important variable, since L2-L1 priming was not obtained with large categories (e.g., living thing), which was taken to indicate that a large category is ineffective as a 'focusing' device to enhance the activation of L2 semantic senses. Finally, it was shown that the priming asymmetry in lexical decision was not due to differential degrees of semantic activation of the prime in L1 and L2.
author2 Forster, Kenneth I.
author_facet Forster, Kenneth I.
Wang, Xin
author Wang, Xin
author_sort Wang, Xin
title Bilingual Lexical Representation and Processing: Evidence from Masked Priming Studies
title_short Bilingual Lexical Representation and Processing: Evidence from Masked Priming Studies
title_full Bilingual Lexical Representation and Processing: Evidence from Masked Priming Studies
title_fullStr Bilingual Lexical Representation and Processing: Evidence from Masked Priming Studies
title_full_unstemmed Bilingual Lexical Representation and Processing: Evidence from Masked Priming Studies
title_sort bilingual lexical representation and processing: evidence from masked priming studies
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/195105
work_keys_str_mv AT wangxin bilinguallexicalrepresentationandprocessingevidencefrommaskedprimingstudies
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