Minding the manner: attention to motion events in Turkish-Dutch early bilinguals
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28227Dato
2022-05-18Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Languages differ in the way motion events are encoded. In satellite-framed languages,
motion verbs typically encode manner, while in verb-framed languages, path. We investigated the ways in which satellite-framed Dutch and verb-framed Turkish co-determine one’s
attention to motion events in early bilinguals. In an EEG oddball paradigm, Turkish–Dutch
bilinguals (n = 25) and Dutch controls (n = 27) watched short video clips of motion events,
followed by a still picture that matched the preceding video in four ways (oddball design: 10%
full match, 10% manner match, 10% endpoint match, and 70% full mismatch). We found that
both groups showed similar oddball P300 effects, associated with task-related attention. Group
differences were revealed in a late positivity (LP): The endpoint-match elicited a larger LP than
the manner-match in the bilinguals, which may reflect language-driven attention. Our results
indicate that cross-linguistic manner encoding difference impacts attention at a later stage.
Forlag
Cambridge University PressSitering
Kamenetski, Lai, Flecken. Minding the manner: attention to motion events in Turkish-Dutch early bilinguals. Language and Cognition. 2022;14(3):456-478Metadata
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