First-language and second-language eye movement reading behavior in monolingual and bilingual children and adults: A focus on word age of acquisition effects

IF 2.6 1区 文学 Q1 LINGUISTICS
Erika Guedea, Sarah MacIsaac, Marc F. Joanisse, Veronica Whitford
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Word age of acquisition (AoA) influences many aspects of language processing, including reading. However, reading studies of word AoA effects have almost exclusively focused on monolingual young adults, leaving their influence in other age and language groups little understood. Here, we investigated how age (childhood, young adulthood) and language background (monolingual, bilingual) influence word AoA effects during first-language (L1) and second-language (L2) reading. Using eye-tracking, we observed larger L1 word AoA effects in children versus adults (across both language backgrounds). Moreover, we observed larger L2 versus L1 word AoA effects in bilinguals (across both ages), with some evidence of heightened effects in bilingual adults (for late-stage reading only). Taken together, our findings suggest that word AoA exerts a stronger influence on reading during conditions of reduced lexical entrenchment, offering critical insights into how both developing and bilingual readers acquire and maintain word representations across their known languages.
单语和双语儿童和成人的第一语言和第二语言眼动阅读行为:对单词习得年龄效应的关注
单词习得年龄(AoA)影响语言加工的许多方面,包括阅读。然而,关于单词AoA效应的阅读研究几乎只关注单语年轻人,而对其他年龄和语言群体的影响却知之甚少。在这里,我们研究了年龄(童年、青年)和语言背景(单语、双语)对第一语言(L1)和第二语言(L2)阅读中单词AoA效应的影响。通过眼动追踪,我们观察到儿童比成人(在两种语言背景下)更大的L1单词AoA效应。此外,我们观察到双语者(在两个年龄段)的L2单词AoA效应比L1单词AoA效应更大,有证据表明双语成人(仅限后期阅读)的效应更强。综上所述,我们的研究结果表明,在词汇巩固程度降低的情况下,单词AoA对阅读的影响更大,这为发展中国家和双语国家的读者如何在他们已知的语言中获得和保持单词表征提供了重要的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.90
自引率
16.70%
发文量
86
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