Journal article 1986 views
Word association in L1 and L2: An exploratory study of response types, response times, and interlingual mediation
Studies in Second Language Acquisition, Volume: 33, Issue: 03, Pages: 373 - 398
Swansea University Authors: Tess Fitzpatrick , Cristina Izura
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DOI (Published version): 10.1017/S0272263111000027
Abstract
Word association responses in fi rst-language (L1) Spanish and secondlanguage(L2) English were investigated by means of responselatencies and types of associative response produced. The primaryaims were to establish whether (a) some response types are producedmore often or faster than others, (b) pa...
Published in: | Studies in Second Language Acquisition |
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ISSN: | 0272-2631 1470-1545 |
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2011
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa10050 |
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2014-03-03T16:00:06.7609003 v2 10050 2012-03-21 Word association in L1 and L2: An exploratory study of response types, response times, and interlingual mediation 9597ef45279e137ada70fc75832a45de 0000-0003-0715-9009 Tess Fitzpatrick Tess Fitzpatrick true false 334f125cf00274e92560e6229b4657f2 0000-0001-9656-4553 Cristina Izura Cristina Izura true false 2012-03-21 CACS Word association responses in fi rst-language (L1) Spanish and secondlanguage(L2) English were investigated by means of responselatencies and types of associative response produced. The primaryaims were to establish whether (a) some response types are producedmore often or faster than others, (b) participants’ L2 responsetime profi les mirror those of their L1, and (c) participants’ L2 associationresponses are mediated by their L1 and modulated by profi -ciency. Results indicate that responses are faster when a doubleassociation link is produced—that is, when the response is associatedby form and meaning ( postman → postbox ) or meaning andcollocation ( spider → web ). L2 response time profi les broadly mirrorthose of the L1, although L2 times are generally slower. A signifi cantpriming effect from L1 translation equivalents of cues used in theL2 association task was observed, suggesting L1 mediation in theproduction of L2 associative responses. Findings are discussed inlight of the revised hierarchical model (Kroll & Stewart, 1994). Newapproaches to modeling and understanding the bilingual lexicon arealso suggested. Journal Article Studies in Second Language Acquisition 33 03 373 398 0272-2631 1470-1545 Word association, reaction times, revised hierarchical model 31 12 2011 2011-12-31 10.1017/S0272263111000027 COLLEGE NANME Culture and Communications School COLLEGE CODE CACS Swansea University 2014-03-03T16:00:06.7609003 2012-03-21T07:01:19.6819273 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Psychology Tess Fitzpatrick 0000-0003-0715-9009 1 Cristina Izura 0000-0001-9656-4553 2 |
title |
Word association in L1 and L2: An exploratory study of response types, response times, and interlingual mediation |
spellingShingle |
Word association in L1 and L2: An exploratory study of response types, response times, and interlingual mediation Tess Fitzpatrick Cristina Izura |
title_short |
Word association in L1 and L2: An exploratory study of response types, response times, and interlingual mediation |
title_full |
Word association in L1 and L2: An exploratory study of response types, response times, and interlingual mediation |
title_fullStr |
Word association in L1 and L2: An exploratory study of response types, response times, and interlingual mediation |
title_full_unstemmed |
Word association in L1 and L2: An exploratory study of response types, response times, and interlingual mediation |
title_sort |
Word association in L1 and L2: An exploratory study of response types, response times, and interlingual mediation |
author_id_str_mv |
9597ef45279e137ada70fc75832a45de 334f125cf00274e92560e6229b4657f2 |
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9597ef45279e137ada70fc75832a45de_***_Tess Fitzpatrick 334f125cf00274e92560e6229b4657f2_***_Cristina Izura |
author |
Tess Fitzpatrick Cristina Izura |
author2 |
Tess Fitzpatrick Cristina Izura |
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Journal article |
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Studies in Second Language Acquisition |
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33 |
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03 |
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373 |
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2011 |
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Swansea University |
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0272-2631 1470-1545 |
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10.1017/S0272263111000027 |
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Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences |
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Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences |
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facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences |
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Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences |
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School of Psychology{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Psychology |
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description |
Word association responses in fi rst-language (L1) Spanish and secondlanguage(L2) English were investigated by means of responselatencies and types of associative response produced. The primaryaims were to establish whether (a) some response types are producedmore often or faster than others, (b) participants’ L2 responsetime profi les mirror those of their L1, and (c) participants’ L2 associationresponses are mediated by their L1 and modulated by profi -ciency. Results indicate that responses are faster when a doubleassociation link is produced—that is, when the response is associatedby form and meaning ( postman → postbox ) or meaning andcollocation ( spider → web ). L2 response time profi les broadly mirrorthose of the L1, although L2 times are generally slower. A signifi cantpriming effect from L1 translation equivalents of cues used in theL2 association task was observed, suggesting L1 mediation in theproduction of L2 associative responses. Findings are discussed inlight of the revised hierarchical model (Kroll & Stewart, 1994). Newapproaches to modeling and understanding the bilingual lexicon arealso suggested. |
published_date |
2011-12-31T18:18:23Z |
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11.04748 |