Abstract
This study investigates the depth of lexical knowledge in first language (L1) speakers and second language
(L2) learners in reference to hierarchical word knowledge. Eighty-eight participants took part in a lexical
decision task that assessed their speed and accuracy in recognizing words and nonwords. Prime and target pairs in the
lexical decision task were related words (hyponynm to hypernym and hypernym to hyponym), unrelated words, or word
to nonwords. The findings indicate bidirectional priming in L1 participants such that associated pairs (hyponynm
to hypernym and hypernym to hyponym) were processed faster than unrelated words. For L2 participants, unidirectional
priming effects were reported for the hyponynm to hypernym condition only. These findings provide evidence that
hierarchical lexical networks characterize L1 lexicons but not L2 networks. Such findings provide important information
about the organizational properties of L1 and L2 lexicons.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Cognitive Neuroscience,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
8 articles.
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