Abstract

Research with monolingual adults has shown that words whose initial stop consonants have canonical VOTs show larger semantic priming effects than words beginning with phonetically non-canonical stops; the prime [k h ](long-lag) facilitates recognition of a semantically related target (queen) more than [k] (short-lag), though both facilitate target recognition (Andruski etal., 1994; van Alphen and McQueen, 2006). The present study asks how the acquisition of a second (L2) phonological system affects word recognition in the native language (L1). A longitudinal semantic priming study ([k]... queen) is being administered to American students in Paris at the beginning, middle, and end of their 4–6 weeks of immersion class enrollment. Two potential patterns may emerge: (1) exposure to instances of French short-lag /k/ may lead to increased facilitation of short-lag [k] primes, indicating an early established link between shared L1 and L2 phonological categories or (2) since stops in the short-lag VOT range are categorized differently in French versus English ([k] = /k/ vs. /g/), increased ambiguity introduced by the L2 system may incur a greater cost for non-canonical variants, causing [k] to become a less effective prime. Both findings have implications for theories of speech perception and representation.

Full Text
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