Litcius/Paper detail

Expecting the unexpected: Code-switching as a facilitatory cue in online sentence processing

Aleksandra Tomić, Jorge R. Valdés Kroff

2021Bilingualism Language and Cognition22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Despite its prominent use among bilinguals, psycholinguistic studies reported code-switch processing costs (e.g., Meuter & Allport, 1999). This paradox may partly be due to the focus on the code-switch itself instead of its potential subsequent benefits. Motivated by corpus studies on CS patterns and sociopragmatic functions of CS, we asked whether bilinguals use code-switches as a cue to the lexical characteristics of upcoming speech. We report a visual world study testing whether code-switching facilitates the anticipation of lower-frequency words. Results confirm that US Spanish–English bilinguals (n = 30) use minority (Spanish) to majority (English) language code-switches in real-time language processing as a cue that a less frequent word would ensue, as indexed by increased looks at images representing lower- vs. higher-frequency words in the code-switched condition, prior to the target word onset. These results highlight the need to further integrate sociolinguistic and corpus observations into the experimental study of code-switching.

Topics & Concepts

Code-switchingSentenceAnticipation (artificial intelligence)Focus (optics)Code (set theory)Computer scienceWord (group theory)Natural language processingSpeech recognitionPsychologyLinguisticsArtificial intelligenceProgramming languagePhysicsOpticsPhilosophySet (abstract data type)Neurobiology of Language and BilingualismLanguage Development and DisordersMultilingual Education and Policy