Translation-priming effects on tip-of-the-tongue states.

Tamar H Gollan, Victor S Ferreira, Cynthia Cera, Susanna Flett
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引用次数: 43

Abstract

Bilinguals experience more tip-of-the-tongue (TOT) states than monolinguals, but it is not known if this is caused in part by access of representations from both of bilinguals' languages, or dual-language activation. In two translation priming experiments, bilinguals were given three Spanish primes and produced either semantically (Experiment 1) or phonologically related Spanish words (Experiment 2) to each. They then named a picture in English. On critical trials, one of the primes was the Spanish translation of the English picture name. Translation primes significantly increased TOTs regardless of task, and also speeded correct retrievals but only with the semantic task. In both experiments translation-primed TOTs were significantly more likely to resolve spontaneously. These results illustrate an effect of non-dominant language activation on dominant-language retrieval, as well as imply that TOTs can arise during (not after) lexical retrieval, at a level of processing where translation equivalent lexical representations normally interact (possibly competing for selection, or mutually activating each other, or both depending on the locus of retrieval failure).

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

翻译启动效应对舌尖状态的影响。
双语者比单语者经历更多的舌尖(TOT)状态,但尚不清楚这部分是由双语者两种语言的表征访问引起的,还是由双语激活引起的。在两个翻译启动实验中,双语者被给予三个西班牙语启动,并对每个启动产生语义(实验1)或语音相关的西班牙语单词(实验2)。然后他们用英语给一幅画命名。在关键试验中,其中一个启动因子是英文图片名称的西班牙语翻译。翻译启动显著提高了tot,且仅在语义任务中加速了正确检索。在这两个实验中,翻译引发的tot明显更容易自发消退。这些结果说明了非主导语言激活对主导语言检索的影响,同时也暗示了tot可能在词汇检索期间(而不是之后)产生,在翻译对等词汇表征通常相互作用的处理水平上(可能竞争选择,或相互激活,或两者都取决于检索失败的位置)。
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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