Development of L1-L2 naming skills in a monolingual context: Evidence from children and adolescents
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/111295Metadatos
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Elsevier
Materia
Bilingualism Monolingual context Naming
Fecha
2024-09-18Patrocinador
Ministry of Science and Innovation (PID2022- 142345NB-I00); Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (PID2021-127728NB-I00); Junta de Andalucía (A-CTS-111-UGR18 / B-CTS-384-UGR20 / P20_00107)Resumen
Adolescence is marked by significant developmental changes that can influence language processing
and control. This study aimed to uncover developmental differences in language coactivation
and control in unbalanced Spanish (L1)-English (L2) bilinguals. Children and adolescents
attending bilingual schools within a L1 monolingual context completed a picture-naming
task including cognates and non-cognates nouns, with collection of behavioral and ERP data.
The study consistently found a cognate facilitation effect (CFE) in L2, evident in enhanced accuracy,
faster reaction times, and reduced N400 negativity for cognates in comparison with nocognate
nouns. However, in L1, CFE was only observed in the N400 component, indicating
weaker transfer from L2 to L1. Additionally, children exhibited greater N200 negativity when
naming cognates in L1, while adolescents showed no N200 modulations, suggesting differences in
frontal control region involvement and potential differences in control strategies. Language coactivation
appears independent of maturation, while language control depends on development.





