The effects of bilingual language proficiency on recall accuracy and semantic clustering in free recall output: evidence for shared semantic associations across languages
Resumen
Two experiments investigated how well bilinguals utilise long-standing semantic associations to
encode and retrieve semantic clusters in verbal episodic memory. In Experiment 1, Spanish-
English bilinguals (N = 128) studied and recalled word and picture sets. Word recall was
equivalent in L1 and L2, picture recall was better in L1 than in L2, and the picture superiority
effect was stronger in L1 than in L2. Semantic clustering in word and picture recall was
equivalent in L1 and L2. In Experiment 2, Spanish-English bilinguals (N = 128) and Englishspeaking
monolinguals (N = 128) studied and recalled word sequences that contained
semantically related pairs. Data were analyzed using a multinomial processing tree approach,
the pair-clustering model. Cluster formation was more likely for semantically organised than
for randomly ordered word sequences. Probabilities of cluster formation, cluster retrieval, and
retrieval of unclustered items did not differ across languages or language groups. Language
proficiency has little if any impact on the utilisation of long-standing semantic associations,
which are language-general.
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