INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN NATURAL LANGUAGE SWITCHING BETWEEN TWO LANGUAGES

Language switching is omnipresent in bilingual persons. In fact, the ability to switch languages (code switching) is a very fast, efficient and flexible process which seems to be a fundamental aspect of bilingual language processing. Here we aimed to characterize individual differences in language s...

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Main Authors: Antoni eRodriguez-Fornells, Ulrike eKramer, Urbano eLorenzo-Seva, Julia eFestman, Thomas F Münte
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2012-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00388/full
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author Antoni eRodriguez-Fornells
Ulrike eKramer
Urbano eLorenzo-Seva
Julia eFestman
Thomas F Münte
author_facet Antoni eRodriguez-Fornells
Ulrike eKramer
Urbano eLorenzo-Seva
Julia eFestman
Thomas F Münte
author_sort Antoni eRodriguez-Fornells
collection DOAJ
description Language switching is omnipresent in bilingual persons. In fact, the ability to switch languages (code switching) is a very fast, efficient and flexible process which seems to be a fundamental aspect of bilingual language processing. Here we aimed to characterize individual differences in language switching psychometrically and to create a reliable measure of this behavioral pattern by introducing a Bilingual Switching Questionnaire (BSWQ). As a working hypothesis and based on the previous literature on code switching we decomposed language switching into four constructs: (i) L1 switching tendencies (the tendency to switch to L1) (L1-switch), (ii) L2 switching tendencies (L2-switch); (iii) Contextual Switch (CS), which indexes the frequency of switches usually triggered by a particular situation, topic or environment and, (iv) Unintended Switch (US), which is measuring the lack of intention and awareness of the language switches. A total of 582 Spanish-Catalan bilingual university students was studied. Twelve items were selected (three for each construct). The correlation matrix was factor-analyzed using Minimum Rank Factor Analysis (MRFA) followed by oblique Direct Oblimin rotation. The overall proportion of common variance explained by the four extracted factors was .86. Finally, in order to assess the external validity of the individual differences scored with the new questionnaire, we evaluated the correlations between these measures and several psychometric (language proficiency) and behavioral measures related to cognitive and attentional control. The present study highlights the importance of assessing individual differences in language switching when studying the interface between cognitive control and bilingualism.
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spelling doaj.art-3b467244b68643a393cccef12491640c2022-12-21T19:00:16ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782012-01-01210.3389/fpsyg.2011.0038811463INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN NATURAL LANGUAGE SWITCHING BETWEEN TWO LANGUAGESAntoni eRodriguez-Fornells0Ulrike eKramer1Urbano eLorenzo-Seva2Julia eFestman3Thomas F Münte4University of BarcelonaUniversity of LübeckUniversity Rovira i VirgilUniversity of MagdeburgUniversity of LübeckLanguage switching is omnipresent in bilingual persons. In fact, the ability to switch languages (code switching) is a very fast, efficient and flexible process which seems to be a fundamental aspect of bilingual language processing. Here we aimed to characterize individual differences in language switching psychometrically and to create a reliable measure of this behavioral pattern by introducing a Bilingual Switching Questionnaire (BSWQ). As a working hypothesis and based on the previous literature on code switching we decomposed language switching into four constructs: (i) L1 switching tendencies (the tendency to switch to L1) (L1-switch), (ii) L2 switching tendencies (L2-switch); (iii) Contextual Switch (CS), which indexes the frequency of switches usually triggered by a particular situation, topic or environment and, (iv) Unintended Switch (US), which is measuring the lack of intention and awareness of the language switches. A total of 582 Spanish-Catalan bilingual university students was studied. Twelve items were selected (three for each construct). The correlation matrix was factor-analyzed using Minimum Rank Factor Analysis (MRFA) followed by oblique Direct Oblimin rotation. The overall proportion of common variance explained by the four extracted factors was .86. Finally, in order to assess the external validity of the individual differences scored with the new questionnaire, we evaluated the correlations between these measures and several psychometric (language proficiency) and behavioral measures related to cognitive and attentional control. The present study highlights the importance of assessing individual differences in language switching when studying the interface between cognitive control and bilingualism.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00388/fullbilingualismcognitive controlNatural Language switchingPsychometric
spellingShingle Antoni eRodriguez-Fornells
Ulrike eKramer
Urbano eLorenzo-Seva
Julia eFestman
Thomas F Münte
INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN NATURAL LANGUAGE SWITCHING BETWEEN TWO LANGUAGES
Frontiers in Psychology
bilingualism
cognitive control
Natural Language switching
Psychometric
title INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN NATURAL LANGUAGE SWITCHING BETWEEN TWO LANGUAGES
title_full INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN NATURAL LANGUAGE SWITCHING BETWEEN TWO LANGUAGES
title_fullStr INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN NATURAL LANGUAGE SWITCHING BETWEEN TWO LANGUAGES
title_full_unstemmed INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN NATURAL LANGUAGE SWITCHING BETWEEN TWO LANGUAGES
title_short INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN NATURAL LANGUAGE SWITCHING BETWEEN TWO LANGUAGES
title_sort individual differences in natural language switching between two languages
topic bilingualism
cognitive control
Natural Language switching
Psychometric
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00388/full
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