Psycholinguistics coffee
Speaker: Dalia García (University of California, Riverside)
Title: Catching the Cognitive Consequences of Bilingual Language Processing on the Fly
Abstract: Bilingualism has consequences for language processing (Kroll et al., 2008) and cognitive functioning (Bialystok, 2017). However, most of the literature on bilingualism and cognition does not examine how bilinguals process language in relation to their cognitive abilities. The goal of this study is to capture how cognitive control is engaged while language is processed. To do this, we use a novel cross-task adaptation paradigm (Hsu & Novick, 2016) that interleaves a Stroop task and a sentence comprehension task using the visual-world paradigm. This setup will allow us to determine how the engagement of cognitive control modulates processing costs associated with syntactic/semantic ambiguity. We specifically compare performance of English monolinguals and proficient bilinguals to characterize similarities and differences in how the two groups adapt to conflict more generally.
Contact
The sessions are organised by the Language, Cognition, and Communication research group. For more information or to be added to the mailing list, please email Anita Tobar Henríquez or Irene Winther.
Psycholinguistics coffee
Room S38, Psychology Building, 7 George Square, Edinburgh, EH8 9JZ