Effects of dominance on language switching: A longitudinal study of Turkish-Dutch children with and without developmental language disorder
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35534Dato
2024-09-13Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Snijders, Vera; Van Witteloostuijn, Merel; Boerma, Tessel; Timmermeister, Mona; Blom, ElmaSammendrag
Bilinguals frequently switch between languages. The present study examined cued language
switching (CLS) longitudinally in bilingual Turkish–Dutch children with (n = 11) and without
(n = 30) developmental language disorder (DLD) in a three-wave design with one-year intervals. We studied effects of dominance, indexed by language proficiency and exposure, on overall switching performance and the costs associated with switching between languages. Results
show limited evidence for overall costs associated with language switching (i.e., only mixing
costs in reaction times [RTs]). Further, accuracy on CLS increased with increasing dominance
in the trial language. Moreover, better performance, and larger switching costs, were found in
the majority (Dutch) compared to the minority (Turkish) language. These results are discussed in light of the sociolinguistic context. As hypothesized, more errors, longer RTs and
slightly larger mixing costs were observed in children with DLD, suggesting overall word
retrieval difficulties and difficulties with cognitive control.
Forlag
Cambridge University PressSitering
Snijders, Van Witteloostuijn, Boerma, Timmermeister, Blom. Effects of dominance on language switching: A longitudinal study of Turkish-Dutch children with and without developmental language disorder. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition. 2024Metadata
Vis full innførselSamlinger
Copyright 2024 The Author(s)