
The role of phonological structure and experience in bilingual children's nonword repetition performance
Author(s) -
Todd A. Gibson,
Connie Summers,
Elizabeth D. Peña,
Lisa M. Bedore,
Ronald B. Gillam,
Thomas M. Bohman
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
bilingualism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.471
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1469-1841
pISSN - 1366-7289
DOI - 10.1017/s1366728914000248
Subject(s) - repetition (rhetorical device) , linguistics , psychology , neuroscience of multilingualism , phonology , audiology , medicine , philosophy
The current study examined the influence of phonological structure and language experience on the nonword repetition performance of bilingual children. Twenty-six Spanish-dominant and 26 English-dominant Spanish-English bilingual five-year-old children were matched on current exposure to the dominant language and year of first exposure to English. Participants repeated non-wordlike nonwords in English and Spanish. The Spanish-dominant group performed better than the English-dominant group for both Spanish and English nonwords. In addition, there was a main effect for test language, where Spanish nonwords were produced more accurately than English nonwords overall. The Spanish-dominant group advantage for nonwords is interpreted as emerging from the extra practice the dominant Spanish speakers had producing multisyllabic words.