Not just semantics: Strong frequency and weak cognate effects on semantic association in bilinguals

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Abstract

To investigate the possibility that knowledge of two languages influences the nature of semantic representations, bilinguals and monolinguals were compared in a word association task. In Experiment 1, bilinguals produced less typical responses relative to monolinguals when given cues with a very common associate (e.g., given bride, bilinguals said "dress" instead of "groom"). In Experiment 2, bilinguals produced responses as typical as those of monolinguals when given cues with high-frequency associates, but not when given cues with lowfrequency associates. Bilinguals' responses were also affected, to a certain extent, by the cognate status of the stimulus word pairs: They were more similar to monolinguals' responses when the cue and its strongest associate were both cognates (e.g., minute-second is minuto-segundo in Spanish), as opposed to both being noncognates. Experiment 3 confirmed the presence of a robust frequency effect on bilingual but not on monolingual association responses. These findings imply a lexical locus for the bilingual effect on association responses and reveal the association task to be not quite as purely semantic as was previously assumed. © 2010 The Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Antón-Méndez, I., & Gollan, T. H. (2010). Not just semantics: Strong frequency and weak cognate effects on semantic association in bilinguals. Memory and Cognition, 38(6), 723–739. https://doi.org/10.3758/MC.38.6.723

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