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On the flexibility of bilingual language control: The effect of language context
2018
Bilingualism: Language and Cognition
How flexible is bilingual language control and how does it adapt to the linguistic context of a conversation? We address this by looking at the pattern of switch costs in contexts involving mostly the use of a dominant or non-dominant language. This linguistic context affected switching patterns: switching was equally costly for both languages in a dominant (L1) context, while switching was harder for the weaker language in the non-dominant (L2) context. Also, naming latencies for each language
doi:10.1017/s1366728918000329
fatcat:7qyf2a6uu5bi5olintdrpqbj7a