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Broos, Wouter P. J.; Dijkgraaf, Aster; Van Assche, Eva; Vander Beken, Heleen; Dirix, Nicolas; Lagrou, Evelyne; Hartsuiker, Robert J.; Duyck, Wouter – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2019
In dialogue, speakers tend to adapt their speech to the speech of their interlocutor. Adapting speech production to preceding speech input may be particularly relevant for second language (L2) speakers interacting with native (L1) speakers, as adaptation may facilitate L2 learning. Here we asked whether Dutch-English bilinguals adapt pronunciation…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Bilingualism, Pronunciation, Second Language Learning
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Smalle, Eleonore H. M.; Muylle, Merel; Szmalec, Arnaud; Duyck, Wouter – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2017
Speech errors typically respect the speaker's implicit knowledge of language-wide phonotactics (e.g., /t/ cannot be a syllable onset in the English language). Previous work demonstrated that adults can learn novel experimentally induced phonotactic constraints by producing syllable strings in which the allowable position of a phoneme depends on…
Descriptors: Children, Adults, Speech, Syllables
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Van Assche, Eva; Duyck, Wouter; Gollan, Tamar H. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2013
The current study investigated the scope of bilingual language control differentiating between whole-language control involving control of an entire lexicon specific to 1 language and lexical-level control involving only a restricted set of recently activated lexical representations. To this end, we tested 60 Dutch-English (Experiment 1) and 64…
Descriptors: Whole Language Approach, Bilingual Education, Lexicology, Phonemes
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Lagrou, Evelyne; Hartsuiker, Robert J.; Duyck, Wouter – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2011
Many studies in bilingual visual word recognition have demonstrated that lexical access is not language selective. However, research on bilingual word recognition in the auditory modality has been scarce, and it has yielded mixed results with regard to the degree of this language nonselectivity. In the present study, we investigated whether…
Descriptors: Cues, Second Languages, Word Recognition, Indo European Languages