Lexical competition in non-native spoken-word recognition
Publication year
2004Source
Journal of Memory and Language, 50, 1, (2004), pp. 1-25ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
SW OZ DCC BO
SW OZ DCC CO
Former Organization
SW OZ NICI CO
Journal title
Journal of Memory and Language
Volume
vol. 50
Issue
iss. 1
Page start
p. 1
Page end
p. 25
Subject
PsycholinguisticsAbstract
Six eye-tracking experiments examined lexical competition in non-native spoken-word recognition. Dutch listeners hearing English fixated longer on distractor pictures with names containing vowels that Dutch listeners are likely to confuse with vowels in a target picture name (pencil, given target panda) than on less confusable distractors (beetle, given target bottle). English listeners showed no such viewing time difference. The confusability was asymmetric: given pencil as target, panda did not distract more than distinct competitors. Distractors with Dutch names phonologically related to English target names (deksel, 'lid', given target desk) also received longer fixations than distractors with phonologically unrelated names. Again, English listeners showed no differential effect. With the materials translated into Dutch, Dutch listeners showed no activation of the English words (desk, given target deksel). The results motivate two conclusions: native phonemic categories capture second-language input even when stored representations maintain a second-language distinction; and lexical competition is greater for non-native than for native listeners.
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- Academic publications [248099]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [30727]
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