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Language Control After Phrasal Planning: Playing Whack-a-Mole with Language Switch Costs.

Chuchu Li1, Victor S Ferreira1, Tamar H Gollan1

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Bilinguals experience language switch costs just before producing a phrase in a different language. This suggests that bilinguals complete their phrasal planning in their default language before switching.

Keywords:
bilingual language switchingdefault language selectionphrasal planning

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Area of Science:

  • Psycholinguistics
  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Bilingualism Research

Background:

  • Understanding how bilinguals manage multiple languages is crucial for cognitive science.
  • Previous research indicates language switching incurs cognitive costs, but the precise timing is debated.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the temporal dynamics of language switching during sentence production in bilingual individuals.
  • To determine when language switch costs manifest in speech production.

Main Methods:

  • Spanish-English and Chinese-English bilinguals described visual arrays using English.
  • Sentences varied in complexity (simple vs. complex initial phrases) and contained mixed-language elements.
  • Production durations for specific words were measured to identify speech timing.

Main Results:

  • Language switch costs were observed just before or as bilinguals began producing a phrase requiring a language switch.
  • In complex sentences, switch costs affected early phrase components ('shoe', 'and').
  • In simpler sentences, switch costs appeared later in the phrase, closer to the switched word.

Conclusions:

  • Bilinguals appear to complete phrasal planning in their default language before initiating a switch to a non-default language.
  • These findings provide evidence for a late-stage language selection process during sentence formulation.