Date of Archiving
2021Archive
Radboud Data Repository
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Publication type
Dataset
Access level
Restricted access
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Organization
PI Group Neurobiology of Language
SW OZ DCC PL
Audience(s)
Language and literature studies
Languages used
English
Key words
memory; bilingual; word learningAbstract
First-language research suggests that new words, after initial episodic-memory encoding, are consolidated and hence become lexically integrated. We asked here if lexical consolidation, about word forms and meanings, occurs in a second language. Italian-English sequential bilinguals learned novel English-like words (e.g., apricon, taught to mean “stapler”). fMRI analyses failed to reveal a predicted shift, after consolidation time, from hippocampal to temporal neocortical activity. In a pause-detection task, responses to existing phonological competitors of learned words (e.g., apricot for apricon) were slowed down if the words had been learned two days earlier (i.e., after consolidation time) but not if they had been learned the same day. In a lexical-decision task, new words primed responses tosemantically-related existing words (e.g., apricon-paper) whether the words were learned that day or two days earlier. Consolidation appears to support integration of words into the bilingual lexicon, possibly more rapidly for meanings than for forms.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Datasets [1912]
- Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging [4040]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [30494]