Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

English compound word processing: Evidence from Mandarin Chinese-English bilinguals

Mayila, Yakefu
Citations
Altmetric:
Abstract
Much research has focused on the how monolinguals process morphologically complex words. However, there has been less research that focuses on how bilinguals process morphologically complex words in their L2. This study investigated how bilinguals process English noun-noun compound words. Processing was investigated using a masked priming word recognition task in high-proficiency Mandarin Chinese-English bilinguals (Chinese is their native language and English is their second language). Participants made visual lexical decisions to compound word targets preceded by masked primes which were second constituents of the compounds, sharing either 1) a semantically transparent morphological relationship with the target (e.g. bone-cheekbone), which is called the transparent condition; 2) an apparent morphological relationship, but no semantic relationship with the target (e.g., moon-honeymoon), which is called the opaque condition; 3) an orthographic relationship with the target (e.g., plate-birthplace) , which is called the orthographic condition; 4) a direct translation in Chinese of the second constituent of the target (e.g., 纸(paper)-newspaper), which is called the Chinese condition. The results showed that the transparent and Chinese conditions produced significant priming effects, but the opaque condition and orthographic condition did not. Regarding the processing of morphologically complex words, this study provides some evidence that Mandarin Chinese-English bilinguals used a decompositional route for transparent compound words, but whole word processing for opaque compound words. The priming effects found in the Chinese condition suggest that when Mandarin Chinese-English bilinguals process their second language, their first language is also activated.
Description
Date
2010-04-28
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Kansas
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Keywords
Language, linguistics, Chinese-english bilinguals, Compound words, Language processing
Citation
DOI
Embedded videos