Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Fibla L" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Language Exposure and Brain Myelination in Early Development Fibla L; Forbes SH; McCarthy J; Mee K; Magnotta V; Deoni S; Cameron D; Spencer JP; 37188518
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Patterns of language switching and bilingual children's word learning: An experiment across two communities Tsui RK; Kosie JE; Fibla L; Lew-Williams C; Byers-Heinlein K; 38405269
CONCORDIA
3 Bilingual Language Development in Infancy: What Can We Do to Support Bilingual Families? Fibla L; Kosie JE; Kircher R; Lew-Williams C; Byers-Heinlein K; 35224184
CONCORDIA

 

Title:Patterns of language switching and bilingual children's word learning: An experiment across two communities
Authors:Tsui RKKosie JEFibla LLew-Williams CByers-Heinlein K
Link:pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38405269/
DOI:10.1037/tps0000353
Publication:Translational issues in psychological science
Keywords:
PMID:38405269 Category: Date Added:2024-02-26
Dept Affiliation: CONCORDIA
1 Concordia University.
2 Princeton University.

Description:

Language switching is common in bilingual environments, including those of many bilingual children. Some bilingual children hear rapid switching that involves immediate translation of words (an 'immediate-translation' pattern), while others hear their languages most often in long blocks of a single language (a 'one-language-at-a-time' pattern). Our two-site experimental study compared two groups of developing bilinguals from different communities, and investigated whether differences in the timing of language switching impose different demands on bilingual children's learning of novel nouns in their two languages: do children learn differently if they hear a translation immediately vs. if they hear translations more separated in time? Using an at-home online tablet word learning task, data were collected asynchronously from 3- to 5-year-old bilinguals from French-English bilingual families in Montreal, Canada (N = 31) and Spanish-English bilingual families in New Jersey, USA (N = 22). Results showed that bilingual children in both communities readily learned new words, and their performance was similar across the immediate-translation and one-language-at-a-time conditions. Our findings highlight that different types of bilingual interactions can provide equal learning opportunities for bilingual children's vocabulary development.




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