Abstract

Previous research has shown that as the level of background noise increases, auditory word recognition performance drops off more rapidly for bilinguals than monolinguals. This disproportionate bilingual deficit has often been attributed to a presumed increase in cross-language activation in noise, although no studies have specifically tested for such an increase. We propose two distinct mechanisms by which background noise could cause an increase in cross-language activation: a phonetically based account and an executive function-based account. We explore the evidence for the phonetically based account by comparing cognate facilitation effects for three groups of native English listeners (monolinguals, late (L2) learners of Spanish, and heritage Spanish speakers) and four noise conditions (no noise, speech-shaped noise, English two-talker babble, and Spanish two-talker babble) during an auditory lexical decision task in English. By examining word recognition in the dominant language, the role of language control mechanisms is minimized, and by examining three different types of competing noise, the role of energetic vs. informational masking can be assessed. Contrary to predictions, we find no evidence that background noise modulates cross-language activation; cognate facilitation is constant across the four noise conditions. Instead, several indices of word recognition performance are found to correlate with aspects of linguistic experience: (1) The magnitude of the cognate facilitation effect is correlated with heritage listeners’ self-ratings of Spanish proficiency; (2) Overall noise deficits are marginally larger for heritage listeners with lower English vocabulary scores; (3) Heritage listeners’ Spanish self-ratings predict their magnitude of informational masking; (4) For all bilinguals, the degree of masking incurred in both English and Spanish two-talker babble is correlated with self-reported daily exposure to Spanish; and (5) The degree of masking incurred by Spanish babble is correlated with Spanish vocabulary knowledge. The results enrich our understanding of auditory word recognition in heritage speakers in particular and provide evidence that informational masking is most subject to modulation due to variation in linguistic experience. It remains to be seen whether cross-language activation is modulated by noise when the target language is the less dominant one.

Highlights

  • Non-native listeners are likely keenly aware that speech perception difficulties in adverse listening conditions appear amplified in a less-proficient language

  • Given that all participants were English-dominant, this result suggests that regular exposure to a non-dominant language may confer benefits in terms of coping with informational masking; we return to this idea in the General Discussion

  • The results suggest that (1) for heritage listeners, PC4-SpaSelfRating likely indexed some aspect of early-acquired English lexicalphonetic knowledge and (2) this knowledge was distinct from daily language exposure (i.e., PC1-DailySpaExposure), Spanish age of acquisition (PC3-SpaAoA), or Spanish vocabulary knowledge (SpaLexTALE)

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Summary

Introduction

Non-native listeners are likely keenly aware that speech perception difficulties in adverse listening conditions appear amplified in a less-proficient language (see Garcia Lecumberri et al, 2010 and Scharenborg and van Os, 2019 for reviews). Whether in a sentence context (Mayo et al, 1997; Bradlow and Alexander, 2007) or not (Tabri et al, 2011; Scharenborg et al, 2018; Morini and Newman, 2020), have more often found that in increasing levels of noise, non-native performance drops off at a faster rate relative to natives This suggests that bilingual lexical processing may be disrupted in noise and/ or that focusing on word recognition in noise may provide a window into a critical nexus of processing demands

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