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Divergence point analyses of visual world data: applications to bilingual research

Kate Stone, Sol Lago, Daniel J. Schad

2020Bilingualism Language and Cognition59 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Much work has shown that differences in the timecourse of language processing are central to comparing native (L1) and non-native (L2) speakers. However, estimating the onset of experimental effects in timecourse data presents several statistical problems including multiple comparisons and autocorrelation. We compare several approaches to tackling these problems and illustrate them using an L1-L2 visual world eye-tracking dataset. We then present a bootstrapping procedure that allows not only estimation of an effect onset, but also of a temporal confidence interval around this divergence point. We describe how divergence points can be used to demonstrate timecourse differences between speaker groups or between experimental manipulations, two important issues in evaluating L2 processing accounts. We discuss possible extensions of the bootstrapping procedure, including determining divergence points for individual speakers and correlating them with individual factors like L2 exposure and proficiency. Data and an analysis tutorial are available at https://osf.io/exbmk/ .

Topics & Concepts

Bootstrapping (finance)Divergence (linguistics)PsychologyPoint (geometry)Artificial intelligenceAutocorrelationComputer scienceNatural language processingCognitive psychologyStatisticsEconometricsLinguisticsMathematicsPhilosophyGeometryNeurobiology of Language and BilingualismCategorization, perception, and languageReading and Literacy Development
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