Events
- This event has passed.
Ariel Chan – “Bilingualism in Context: The Role of Language Experience and Cultural Identity in Language Processing”
January 30 @ 10:00 am - 11:30 am | Humanities 2, Room 259
The Department of Languages and Applied Linguistics is pleased to present:
“Bilingualism in Context: The Role of Language Experience and Cultural Identity in Language Processing”
with Ariel Chan, Ph.D.
Stanford University
Abstract
Bilingualism is inherently a social phenomenon with variation. Sociolinguistic research (e.g., Chen, 2008; Lo, 1999; Milroy & Wei, 1995) has demonstrated that bilinguals employ code-switching for identity construction. Meanwhile, recent psycholinguistic research (e.g., Beatty-Martinez et al., 2020; Kaan et al., 2020; Treffers-Daller et al., 2020) has emerged to consider individual differences within interactional contexts and social networks.
How do sociocultural factors, such as language experience and cultural identity, impact bilinguals’ cognitive and language processing?
What insights about language processing can we gain from cross-disciplinary psycholinguistic and sociolinguistic research?
In this talk, Ariel Chan will explore these two questions by examining code-switching among three groups of Cantonese-English bilinguals with diverse language experience and cultural identity from an integrated psycholinguistic and sociolinguistic perspective. To begin, she will present behavioral data from three experiments, examining how language experience and cultural identity modulate code-switching comprehension and production within a controlled laboratory context. In the second part of the talk, Chan will focus on naturalistic code-switching data in conversations. Using data from a map task, she will demonstrate how variation in language experience and cultural identity is reflected in the bilinguals’ code-switching patterns. The synthesis of experimental and qualitative data highlights the significant roles of both language experience and cultural identity in shaping cognitive and linguistic processes, underscoring the importance of incorporating sociocultural contexts into bilingualism research.