Self-Repair and Language Selection in Bilingual Speech Processing

In psycholinguistic research the exact level of language selection in bilingual lexical access is still controversial and current models of bilingual speech production offer conflicting statements about the mechanisms and location of language selection. This paper aim...

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Main Author: Inga Hennecke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses universitaires de Caen 2013-07-01
Series:Discours
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/discours/8789
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author Inga Hennecke
author_facet Inga Hennecke
author_sort Inga Hennecke
collection DOAJ
description In psycholinguistic research the exact level of language selection in bilingual lexical access is still controversial and current models of bilingual speech production offer conflicting statements about the mechanisms and location of language selection. This paper aims to provide a corpus analysis of self-repair mechanisms in code-switching contexts of highly fluent bilingual speakers in order to gain further insights into bilingual speech production. The present paper follows the assumptions of the Selection by Proficiency model, which claims that language proficiency and lexical robustness determine the mechanism and level of language selection. In accordance with this hypothesis, highly fluent bilinguals select languages at a prelexical level, which should influence the occurrence of self-repairs in bilingual speech. A corpus of natural speech data of highly fluent and balanced bilingual French-English speakers of the Canadian French variety Franco-Manitoban serves as the basis for a detailed analysis of different self-repair mechanisms in code-switching environments. Although the speech data contain a large amount of code-switching, results reveal that only a few speech errors and self-repairs occur in direct code-switching environments. A detailed analysis of the respective starting point of code-switching and the different repair mechanisms supports the hypothesis that highly proficient bilinguals do not select languages at the lexical level.
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spelling doaj.art-eb6cdc62127f46469ab5998d4374aa352022-12-21T20:46:05ZengPresses universitaires de CaenDiscours1963-17232013-07-011210.4000/discours.8789Self-Repair and Language Selection in Bilingual Speech ProcessingInga HenneckeIn psycholinguistic research the exact level of language selection in bilingual lexical access is still controversial and current models of bilingual speech production offer conflicting statements about the mechanisms and location of language selection. This paper aims to provide a corpus analysis of self-repair mechanisms in code-switching contexts of highly fluent bilingual speakers in order to gain further insights into bilingual speech production. The present paper follows the assumptions of the Selection by Proficiency model, which claims that language proficiency and lexical robustness determine the mechanism and level of language selection. In accordance with this hypothesis, highly fluent bilinguals select languages at a prelexical level, which should influence the occurrence of self-repairs in bilingual speech. A corpus of natural speech data of highly fluent and balanced bilingual French-English speakers of the Canadian French variety Franco-Manitoban serves as the basis for a detailed analysis of different self-repair mechanisms in code-switching environments. Although the speech data contain a large amount of code-switching, results reveal that only a few speech errors and self-repairs occur in direct code-switching environments. A detailed analysis of the respective starting point of code-switching and the different repair mechanisms supports the hypothesis that highly proficient bilinguals do not select languages at the lexical level.http://journals.openedition.org/discours/8789self-repairHesitation and Monitoring Phenomenabilingualismlexical accessspeech production
spellingShingle Inga Hennecke
Self-Repair and Language Selection in Bilingual Speech Processing
Discours
self-repair
Hesitation and Monitoring Phenomena
bilingualism
lexical access
speech production
title Self-Repair and Language Selection in Bilingual Speech Processing
title_full Self-Repair and Language Selection in Bilingual Speech Processing
title_fullStr Self-Repair and Language Selection in Bilingual Speech Processing
title_full_unstemmed Self-Repair and Language Selection in Bilingual Speech Processing
title_short Self-Repair and Language Selection in Bilingual Speech Processing
title_sort self repair and language selection in bilingual speech processing
topic self-repair
Hesitation and Monitoring Phenomena
bilingualism
lexical access
speech production
url http://journals.openedition.org/discours/8789
work_keys_str_mv AT ingahennecke selfrepairandlanguageselectioninbilingualspeechprocessing