• Title/Summary/Keyword: bilinguals

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Semantic Processing in Korean and English Word Production (모국어와 외국어 단어 산출에서의 의미정보 처리과정)

  • Kim Hyo-Sun;Nam Ki-Chun;Kim Choong-Myung
    • MALSORI
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    • no.57
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    • pp.59-72
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    • 2006
  • The purpose of this study was to see whether Korean-English bilinguals' semantic systems of Korean and English are shared or separated between the two languages. In a series of picture-word interference tasks, participants were required to name the pictures in Korean or in English with distractor words printed either in Korean or English. The distractor words were any of identical, semantically related, or neutral to the picture. The response time of naming was facilitated when distractor words were semantically identical for both same- and different-language pairs. But this facilitation effect was stronger when naming was produced in their native language, which in this case was Korean. Also, inhibitory effect was found when the picture and its distractor word were semantically related in both same- and different-language paired conditions. From these results it can be concluded that semantic representations of Korean and English may not be entirely but partly overlapping in bilinguals.

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Syntax Process in English Sentence Types : Comparison between Korean-English Bilinguals and Korean Non-bilinguals (이중언어자와 한국 대학생의 문장 유형별 영어 통사처리 특성 조사)

  • Park, Jin-Han;Oh, Chang-Young;Yum, Eun-Young;Chung, Chan-Sup
    • Annual Conference on Human and Language Technology
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    • 1996.10a
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    • pp.123-127
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    • 1996
  • 영어와 한국어의 통사구조의 차이로 인하여, 이중언어자와 비이중언어자인 한국 대학생의 영어 문장 유형에 따른 통사 처리에 있어 차이가 있을 것이다. 네가지 영어 문장 유형, 수동태, 관계사절, 물주구문, 가정법 구문 등으로 문장 완성 과제를 실험하여 이중언어자와 비이중언어자의 문장완성 시간과 오류율을 측정하였다. 실험 결과 비이중언어자인 한국 대학생은 다른 문장 유형에 비하여 물주구문에서의 통사처리 수행에 있어 이중언어자와 유의한 차이를 보였다. 이로부터 이중언어자와 한국 대학생의 영어 문장의 통사 정보처리의 자동화 및 어순효과 정보와 생물 주어(word animacy)구문 단서, 즉 대부분의 주어는 살아있는 사물의 명사로 이루어져 있다는 단서(Gass, l987)의 사용에 대하여 논의하였다.

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The Mental Representation of English Verb in Korean-English Moderate Bilingual (한국어-영어 이중언어화자의 외국어 동사 표상)

  • Shin Jung-Moo;Nam Ki-Chun
    • Proceedings of the KSPS conference
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    • 2006.05a
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    • pp.113-116
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    • 2006
  • This research was investigate to understand how moderate bilingual subjects represent the lexicon in second language. Although most researches have focused only on high proficient bilinguals, we analysed how moderate bilinguals who have learned English mostly in school represent the prototype of verb and its inflected form of verb. Results of lexical decision task showed that moderate bilingual subjects used different mental representation depending on whether the verb have regular or irregular conjugation. With regular verbs, the identification of an inflected form was affected by both the frequency of its prototype and that of inflected form, but with irregular verbs, it is affected only by the frequency of inflected form.

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Lexical Access in the Bilinguals and the Category-specific Semantic System (이중언어의 어휘접근과 범주 특수적 의미체계)

  • Lee, Seung-Bok;Jung, Hyo-Sun;Jo, Seong-Woo
    • Korean Journal of Cognitive Science
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    • v.21 no.4
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    • pp.505-534
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    • 2010
  • The purpose of this study was aimed to compare the lexical access and representation of semantic system in the bilinguals. The participants(late Korean-English bilinguals) performed the word-picture matching task. The task was to decide whether the pictures presented after the words(basic-level categories) represent the Korean(L1) or English(L2) words' meaning or not. The stimuli were consisted of common object belonged to four different categories(animal, part of body, clothes, tool). To control the translation strategies, the SOA(stimulus onset asynchrony) were manipulated as 650ms(Exp. 1) and 200ms(Exp. 2). In both experiment, the RTs were faster in L1 condition. The decision time of the part of body categories were shorter than the animal in L1 condition. In L2 condition, clothes were responded faster than the tools. The differences of the lexical access time implied that the bilingual semantic system seemed to be structured by more sub-level categories than the super-level, living or non-living things, and the ways to access the bilingual lexicon might be differentiated according to the languages.

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Bilingualism and Processing Strategies: Backward Transfer in Korean-Chinese Bilinguals (이중언어와 문장 처리 전략: 한국어-중국어 이중언어자의 전략후행전이)

  • Lee, Kwee-Ock;Jun, Jong-Sup;Park, Hye-Won;Ahn, Jung-Ok
    • Korean Journal of Cognitive Science
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    • v.14 no.4
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    • pp.21-31
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    • 2003
  • This paper reports our experimental study with Korean-Chinese (=KC) bilinguals as compared with Korean monolinguals. We aim to find KC bilingual speakers' sentence processing strategies, and the interaction between the Ll and U2 grammars in bilingual development. To this end, we recruited 166 subjects of all age groups from age 3 to adult in the Korean autonomous community in Yanji, China, and did a classical subject/actor identification test, where subjects are supposed to pick out the subjects/actor of both sensical and nonsensical sentences (cf. Liu, Bates & Li, 1992). We compared our results with our previous work on monolingual Koreans, and found out that KC bilinguals rely on word order as well as anumacy; that KC bilinguals make use of morphology at age 10 as compared with age 5 for monolinguals; and that KC bilingual adults rely on animacy and word order as well as morphology, while monolingual Korean adults rely solely on morphology for sentence interpretation. Given that animacy and word order play an important role in the Chinese grammar, our finding lends support to the backward transfer which Liu, Bates & Li (1992) propose for early bilingualism.

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The Effects of Korean Coda-neutralization Process on Word Recognition in English (한국어의 종성중화 작용이 영어 단어 인지에 미치는 영향)

  • Kim, Sun-Mi;Nam, Ki-Chun
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.2 no.1
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    • pp.59-68
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    • 2010
  • This study addresses the issue of whether Korean(L1)-English(L2) non-proficient bilinguals are affected by the native coda-neutralization process when recognizing words in English continuous speech. Korean phonological rules require that if liaison occurs between 'words', then coda-neutralization process must come before the liaison process, which results in liaison-consonants being coda-neutralized ones such as /b/, /d/, or /g/, rather than non-neutralized ones like /p/, /t/, /k/, /$t{\int}$/, /$d_{\Im}$/, or /s/. Consequently, if Korean listeners apply their native coda-neutralization rules to English speech input, word detection will be easier when coda-neutralized consonants precede target words than when non-neutralized ones do. Word-spotting and word-monitoring tasks were used in Experiment 1 and 2, respectively. In both experiments, listeners detected words faster and more accurately when vowel-initial target words were preceded by coda-neutralized consonants than when preceded by coda non-neutralized ones. The results show that Korean listeners exploit their native phonological process when processing English, irrespective of whether the native process is appropriate or not.

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A study of L1 phonetic drift in the voice onset times of Korean learners of English with long L2 exposure

  • Kim, Mi-Ryoung
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.11 no.4
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    • pp.35-43
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    • 2019
  • This study examines the voice onset times (VOTs) of Korean stops produced by Korean learners of English with high language proficiency and long L2 exposure (i.e., Korean-English bilinguals) to assess whether the VOTs of their lax and aspirated stops are merging and, if so, which types of stops are being changed. Thirteen Korean speakers (six female and seven male) who had studied in the USA for more than three to ten years participated. The results show that the speakers in this study with long L2 exposure are participating in the VOT merger, in which VOTs for aspirated stops are reduced while those for lax stops are increased. In other words, change in VOT affects not only aspirated stops but also lax stops. The results indicate that L1 phonetic drift may not be primarily affected by the amount of L2 exposure, and language contact may not be the primary factor triggering a sound change in the Korean stop system. Further study is necessary focusing on the phonetic shift of the "lax" category because it may play a pivotal role in a tonogenetic-like sound change in present-day Korean.

Korean-English bilingual children's production of stop contrasts

  • Oh, Eunhae
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.11 no.3
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    • pp.1-7
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    • 2019
  • Korean (L1)-English (L2) bilingual adults' and children's production of Korean and English stops was examined to determine the age effects and L2 experience on the development of L1 and L2 stop contrasts. Four groups of Seoul Korean speakers (experienced and inexperienced adult and child groups) and two groups of age-matched native English speakers participated. The overall results of voice onset time (VOT) and fundamental frequency (F0) of phrase-initial stops in Korean and word-intial stops in English showed a delay in the acquisition of L1 due to the dominant exposure to L2. Significantly longer VOT and lower F0 for aspirated stops as well as high temporal variability across repetitions of lenis stops were interpreted to indicate a strong effect of English on Korean stop contrasts for bilingual children. That is, the heavy use of VOT for Korean stop contrasts shows bilingual children's attention to the acoustic cue that are primarily employed in the dominant L2. Furthermore, inexperienced children, but not adults, were shown to create new L2 categories that are distinctive from the L1 within 6 months of L2 experience, suggesting greater independence between the two phonological systems. The implications of bilinguals' age at the time of testing to the degree and direction of L1-L2 interaction are further discussed.

Priming Effect in Korean and English Word Production by Korean Speakers. (한국인의 한국어와 영어 단어 산출에서 나타나는 점화 효과)

  • Kwon Hyewon;Nam Kichun
    • Proceedings of the KSPS conference
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    • 2002.11a
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    • pp.165-168
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    • 2002
  • This research was conducted to investigate the priming effect in Korean and English word production by Korean speakers. Picture-naming with distractors was used as experimental task. The type of target language, the type of distractor language and SOA(Stimulus Onset Asynchrony) were used as variables. Cross-linguistic priming effect and within-linguistic priming effect were mesured to investigate bilinguals' conceptual system.

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Changes in fundamental frequency depending on language, context, and language proficiency for bilinguals (한국어-영어 이중언어 화자의 사용 언어, 문맥, 언어 능숙도에 따른 기본 주파수 변화)

  • Yoon, Somang;Mok, Sora;Youn, Jungseon;Han, Jiyun;Yim, Dongsun
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.11 no.1
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    • pp.9-18
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    • 2019
  • The purpose of this study is to determine whether the mean fundamental frequency (F0) changes depending on language, task, or language proficiency for Korean-English bilinguals. A total of forty-eight Korean-English speakers (28 balanced bilinguals and 20 Korean dominant bilinguals) participated in the study. Participants were asked to read aloud two types of tasks in English and Korean. For statistical analyses, the language ${\times}$ task two-way repeated ANOVAs were conducted within the balanced bilingual group first, and then group ${\times}$ language two-way mixed ANOVAs. The results showed that the females in both bilingual groups changed their mean F0 depending on the language they used and the tasks (p<.05), whereas no significant results were found in the males in either group under any conditions. The mean fundamental frequency in the Korean reading task was significantly higher than that in the English reading task for females in both balanced and Korean dominant bilingual groups. Thus, changes in mean F0 depending on language and context may reflect gender-specific characteristics, and females seem to be more sensitive to the socio-cultural standards that are imposed on them.