Abstract

Lexical processing among bilinguals is often affected by complex patterns of individual experience. In this paper we discuss the psychocentric perspective on language representation and processing, which highlights the centrality of individual experience in psycholinguistic experimentation. We discuss applications to the investigation of lexical processing among multilinguals and explore the advantages of using high-density experiments with multilinguals. High density experiments are designed to co-index measures of lexical perception and production, as well as participant profiles. We discuss the challenges associated with the characterization of participant profiles and present a new data visualization technique, that we term Facial Profiles. This technique is based on Chernoff faces developed over 40 years ago. The Facial Profile technique seeks to overcome some of the challenges associated with the use of Chernoff faces, while maintaining the core insight that recoding multivariate data as facial features can engage the human face recognition system and thus enhance our ability to detect and interpret patterns within multivariate datasets. We demonstrate that Facial Profiles can code participant characteristics in lexical processing studies by recoding variables such as reading ability, speaking ability, and listening ability into iconically-related relative sizes of eye, mouth, and ear, respectively. The balance of ability in bilinguals can be captured by creating composite facial profiles or Janus Facial Profiles. We demonstrate the use of Facial Profiles and Janus Facial Profiles in the characterization of participant effects in the study of lexical perception and production.

Highlights

  • Be possible to graphically demonstrate the manner in which elements of a participant profile are components of an integrated cognitive system

  • SUMMARY: FACIAL PROFILES ENABLE PARTICIPANT CHARACTERISTICS TO THE INTEGRATED INTO THE PRESENTATION AND INTERPRETATION OF P3 RESULTS The examples of Participant Profiles that we have presented above demonstrate a new means by which participant characteristics can be linked to patterns of experimental performance in paradigms such as that P3 paradigm described above

  • We have focused on the mental lexicon and lexical processing in multilinguals and have claimed that the nature of lexical representation and processing among multilinguals will be greatly shaped by experience across the lifespan

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Summary

Participant profiles

These commonalities provide the context and constraints within which individual differences and the effects of individual language experience can play a role in shaping the synchronic character of an individual’s language ability. SUMMARY: P3 EXPERIMENTS PROVIDE A MEANS BY WHICH PARTICIPANT PROFILES CAN BE CREATED The P3 paradigm that we have presented above is essentially a recombination of existing psycholinguistic methodologies The advantage of this type of recombination for the study of second language processing and multilingual processing is its high density as a technique. We see this approach as offering benefit in aiding in the understanding of how participant characteristics (both literally and metaphorically) map onto performance variables in a P3 experiment

JANUS FACIAL PROFILES AND INTERACTIVE FACIAL PROFILES
CONCLUSION
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