Cong Liu, Kalinka Timmer, Lu Jiao, Ruiming Wang
Aims:
The present study aimed to investigate the effect of contexts (i.e., non-conflicting context versus conflicting context) on bilingual language switch costs during language comprehension.
Methodology:
Thirty-two unbalance Chinese-English bilinguals completed a modified comprehension-based language-switching task in two contexts. They made a judgement about the colour meaning of the word. In the non-conflicting context all words were presented in white ink, while in the conflicting context the words were printed in an inconsistent ink colour.
Data and analysis:
Reaction time and accuracy data were analysed using mixed-effects models.
Findings/conclusions:
Results showed that the switch costs were larger in the conflicting context than in the non-conflicting context. Further, in the non-conflicting context an asymmetrical switch cost with larger costs for the second language was observed as compared to symmetrical switch costs in the conflicting context.
Originality:
This is the first study that indicates that bilingual comprehension-based language control adapts flexibly depending on the context, just as during bilingual production.
Significance/implications:
These findings supported and expanded the classic adaptive control hypothesis.
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