The impact of bilingualism in within-language conflict resolution: an ERP study
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Frontiers
Materia
Bilingualism Cognitive control Conflict resolution Within-language conflict Inhibition
Date
2023-05-25Referencia bibliográfica
Andras F, Ramos MÁ and Macizo P (2023) The impact of bilingualism in within-language conflict resolution: an ERP study. Front. Psychol. 14:1173486. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1173486[https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1173486]
Sponsorship
Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (PID2019- 111359GBI00/AEI/10.13039/501100011033)Abstract
We compared Spanish (L1)–English (L2) bilinguals and Spanish monolinguals
in a semantic judgment relationship task in L1 that produced within-language
conflict due to the coactivation of the two meanings of a Spanish homophone
(e.g., “hola” and “ola” meaning “hello” and “a wave” in English). In this task,
participants indicated if pairs of words were related or not (“agua-hola,” “waterhello”).
Conflict arose because a word (“agua,” “water”) not related to the
orthographic form of a homophone (“hola,” “hello”) was related to the alternative
orthographic form (“ola,” “wave”). Compared to a control condition with unrelated
word pairs (“peluche-hola,” “teddy-hello”), the behavioral results revealed greater
behavioral interference in monolinguals compared to bilinguals. In addition,
electrophysiological results revealed N400 differences between monolinguals
and bilinguals. These results are discussed around the impact of bilingualism on
conflict resolution.