Holiday or vacation? The processing of variation in vocabulary across dialects
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Date
2016Author
Martin, Clara D.
Garcia, Xavier
Potter, Douglas
Melinger, Alissa
Costa, Albert
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Clara D. Martin, Xavier Garcia, Douglas Potter, Alissa Melinger & Albert Costa (2016) Holiday or vacation? The processing of variation in vocabulary across dialects, Language, Cognition and Neuroscience, 31:3, 375-390
Abstract
Native speakers with different linguistic backgrounds differ in their usage of language, and
particularly in their vocabulary. For instance, British natives would use the word "holiday" when
American natives would prefer the word "vacation". This study investigates how cross-dialectal
lexical variation impacts lexical processing. Electrophysiological responses were recorded, while
British natives listened to British or American speech in which lexical frequency dominance
across dialects was manipulated (British versus American vocabulary). Words inconsistent with
the dialect of the speaker (British words uttered by American speakers and vice versa) elicited
larger negative electrophysiological deflections than consistent words, 700 ms after stimulus
onset. Thus, processing of British words was easier when listening to British speakers and
processing of American words was easier when listening to American speakers. These results
show that listeners integrate their knowledge about cross-dialectal lexical variations in
vocabulary as speech unfolds, as it was previously shown for social lexical variations.