Investigation of code-switching cost in conversation and self-paced reading tasks

2022 ◽  
pp. 136700692110564
Author(s):  
Yasmeen Faroqi-Shah ◽  
Sophie Wereley

Aims and objectives: Studies of code-switching (CS) in bilingual speakers using laboratory tasks have been equivocal on whether CS is cognitively demanding. The goal of this study was to examine time costs at the juncture of a CS in a more ecologically valid experimental paradigm. Methodology: English (L1)–French (L2) bilingual speakers performed two tasks. The primary experimental task was a novel paradigm that elicited voluntary code-switches in conversation with a bilingual interlocutor. A silent self-paced reading task was used to compare with a laboratory task with involuntary switches. Data and analysis: Intersyllabic durations (conversation task) and reading times (reading task) were analyzed. CS cost was the time difference between code-switches and matched non-switches. Cost-switching costs for each switch direction (English-to-French and French-to-English) and type of switch (alternations and insertions) were also compared. Findings: Code-switches in conversation were associated with a time cost, and the magnitude was comparable in both directions although speakers more frequently switched from French-to-English. In self-paced reading, switching costs were observed only for switches into the dominant language. Across both tasks, there were no differences in CS time cost between insertions and alternations. Originality: This study reports a novel measure of CS costs in conversation, intersyllabic duration, and provides a cross-task comparison in the same group of bilingual speakers to better inform theories of CS. Implications: Bilingual speakers experience a time cost when making voluntary switches in conversations. The symmetrical switch costs suggest that both languages have similar activation levels throughout the conversation, and the cognitive costs arise from the act of momentarily switching languages, irrespective of their dominance. In self-paced reading, cognitive costs arise from disturbing the status quo of relative activation-inhibition of each language adopted to perform the task. The comparable CS time cost for insertions and alternations suggests similar cognitive control and linguistic planning mechanisms for both types of switches.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasmeen Faroqi-Shah ◽  
Sophie Wereley

Bilinguals commonly co-mingle their languages when speaking among other bilinguals, which is known as code-switching (CS). Previous studies of CS using laboratory tasks have been equivocal on whether CS is cognitively demanding, as measured by a time cost. Given that CS time costs could be inflated in laboratory tasks because of their unnatural task requirements, the main goal of this study was to examine CS time costs in a novel naturalistic conversational paradigm in a group of English (L1)-French (L2) bilingual speakers. Producing code-switches in naturalistic conversation was associated with a time cost, and the magnitude was comparable in both directions (English-to-French and French-to-English) although speakers more frequently switched from French-to-English. Thus even though bilinguals may code-switch for sociopragmatic or linguistic accessibility reasons, they experience a time cost when making a switch. There were no differences in CS time cost whether the code-switches involved insertions or alternations between languages. The findings support recent bilingual code-switching models which propose that CS engages cognitive control mechanisms and that these mechanisms are similar for insertions and alternations.


2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amber L. Garcia ◽  
Michael T. Schmitt ◽  
Naomi Ellemers ◽  
Nyla R. Branscombe
Keyword(s):  

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