Datasets for: Semantic classifier congruency in the first and second language
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Tong, Jing
Abstract / Description
This study examines the classifier as semantic-syntactic language feature and investigates the semantic classifier congruency effect in language production. Participants were instructed to name a picture (e.g., noodles) after seeing or hearing a classifier (e.g., a bowl of). In Experiment 1 with English monolinguals, better performance was observed in semantically congruent trials (a bowl of noodles) than in semantically incongruent trials (a bowl of students). In Experiments 2 and 3 with Chinese-English bilinguals, the semantic classifier congruency effect was replicated, but the effect differed in size as a function of the language (smaller for L2 English than for L1 Chinese), language switching (smaller in repeat than in switch trials) and of classifier modality (smaller for written than spoken classifier presentation). Together, these findings provide evidence for a semantic classifier effect in both L1 and L2. Furthermore, they suggest an influence of semantic-syntactic language features in bilingual language control.
Persistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2023-08-25
Publisher
PsychArchives
Citation
-
Experiment1_participant information.csvCSV - 0.52KBMD5: 0461c16fa75b8db900e92f47426d6822
-
Experiment 2_particiapnt information.csvCSV - 1.68KBMD5: a279aba3f9154f98f395fb0de74c0911
-
Experiment 3_particiapnt information.csvCSV - 1.7KBMD5: 7319f1be8c876574e54ac9f4913f21ca
-
Experiment1_RT_Raw.csvCSV - 734.81KBMD5: a1a3f06e6faa5b65cc10b05eb737d10f
-
Experiment2_RT_Raw.csvCSV - 915.03KBMD5: afb18ed14e2efb13967bc631c7ba2087
-
Experiment3_RT_Raw.csvCSV - 914.02KBMD5: c58c2d08d3cf16e3daddbdc42a3b98e1
-
codebook.pdfAdobe PDF - 69.72KBMD5: 5eaf72380ffc9c9d0b38c666a04a7cc5
-
22023-08-25Previous Experiment 1 was conducted without fully counterbalancing all conditions and was used as a second pre-test. A new Experiment 1 with same design was conducted and all conditions were counterbalanced across participants.
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Tong, Jing
-
PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2023-08-25T11:42:02Z
-
Made available on2023-03-17T13:38:57Z
-
Made available on2023-08-25T11:42:02Z
-
Date of first publication2023-08-25
-
Abstract / DescriptionThis study examines the classifier as semantic-syntactic language feature and investigates the semantic classifier congruency effect in language production. Participants were instructed to name a picture (e.g., noodles) after seeing or hearing a classifier (e.g., a bowl of). In Experiment 1 with English monolinguals, better performance was observed in semantically congruent trials (a bowl of noodles) than in semantically incongruent trials (a bowl of students). In Experiments 2 and 3 with Chinese-English bilinguals, the semantic classifier congruency effect was replicated, but the effect differed in size as a function of the language (smaller for L2 English than for L1 Chinese), language switching (smaller in repeat than in switch trials) and of classifier modality (smaller for written than spoken classifier presentation). Together, these findings provide evidence for a semantic classifier effect in both L1 and L2. Furthermore, they suggest an influence of semantic-syntactic language features in bilingual language control.en_US
-
Review statusunknown
-
Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/8121.2
-
Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.13149
-
Language of contentengen_US
-
PublisherPsychArchivesen_US
-
Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
-
TitleDatasets for: Semantic classifier congruency in the first and second languageen_US
-
DRO typeresearchDataen_US