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Priming and persistence in bilinguals: What codeswitching tells us about lexical priming in sentential contexts*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 March 2021

Michael A. Johns*
Affiliation:
Applied Research Laboratory for Intelligence and Security, University of Maryland, College Park, United States of America
Laura Rodrigo
Affiliation:
Department of Spanish, Italian and Portuguese, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, United States of America
Rosa E. Guzzardo Tamargo
Affiliation:
Department of Hispanic Studies, University of Puerto Rico at Río Piedras, San Juan, United States of America
Aliza Winneg
Affiliation:
Department of Spanish, Italian and Portuguese, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, United States of America
Paola E. Dussias
Affiliation:
Department of Spanish, Italian and Portuguese, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, United States of America
*
Address for correspondence: Michael A. Johns, 7005 52nd Avenue, College Park, MD, USA, 20708, The Applied Research Laboratory for Intelligence and Security, The University of Maryland. Email: maj@umd.edu

Abstract

Most studies on lexical priming have examined single words presented in isolation, despite language users rarely encountering words in such cases. The present study builds upon this by examining both within-language identity priming and across-language translation priming in sentential contexts. Highly proficient Spanish–English bilinguals read sentence-question pairs, where the sentence contained the prime and the question contained the target. At earlier stages of processing, we find evidence only of within-language identity priming; at later stages of processing, however, across-language translation priming surfaces, and becomes as strong as within-language identity priming. Increasing the time between the prime sentence and target question results in strengthened priming at the latest stages of processing. These results replicate previous findings at the single-word level but do so within sentential contexts, which has implications both for accounts of priming via automatic spreading activation as well as for accounts of persistence attested in spontaneous speech corpora.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

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