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    Letter and Speech Sound Association in Emerging Readers With Familial Risk of Dyslexia.Joanna Plewko,Katarzyna Chyl,Łukasz Bola,Magdalena Łuniewska,Agnieszka Dębska,Anna Banaszkiewicz,Marek Wypych,Artur Marchewka,Nienke van Atteveldt &Katarzyna Jednoróg -2018 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 12.
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    Home Language Will Not Take Care of Itself: Vocabulary Knowledge in Trilingual Children in the United Kingdom.Karolina Mieszkowska,Magdalena Łuniewska,Joanna Kołak,Agnieszka Kacprzak,Zofia Wodniecka &Ewa Haman -2017 -Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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    How Does L1 and L2 Exposure Impact L1 Performance in Bilingual Children? Evidence from Polish-English Migrants to the United Kingdom. [REVIEW]Ewa Haman,Zofia Wodniecka,Marta Marecka,Jakub Szewczyk,Marta Białecka-Pikul,Agnieszka Otwinowska,Karolina Mieszkowska,Magdalena Łuniewska,Joanna Kołak,Aneta Miękisz,Agnieszka Kacprzak,Natalia Banasik &Małgorzata Foryś-Nogala -2017 -Frontiers in Psychology 8:274876.
    Most studies on bilingual language development focus on children’s second language (L2). Here, we investigated first language (L1) development of Polish-English early migrant bilinguals in four domains: vocabulary, grammar, phonological processing and discourse. We first compared Polish language skills between bilinguals and their Polish non-migrant monolingual peers, and then investigated the influence of the cumulative exposure to L1 and L2 on bilinguals’ performance. We then examined whether high exposure to L1 could possibly minimize the gap between monolinguals and bilinguals. We (...) analyzed data from 233 typically developing children (88 bilingual, 145 monolingual) aged 4;0 to 7;5 (years; months) on six language measures in Polish: receptive vocabulary, productive vocabulary, receptive grammar, productive grammar (sentence repetition), phonological processing (non-word repetition) and discourse abilities (narration). Information about language exposure was obtained via parental questionnaires. For each language task, we analyzed the data from the subsample of bilinguals who had completed all the tasks in question and from monolinguals matched one-on-one to the bilingual group on age, SES (measured by years of mother’s education), gender, non-verbal IQ and short term memory. The bilingual children scored lower than monolinguals in all language domains, except discourse. The group differences were more pronounced on the productive tasks (vocabulary, grammar, phonological processing) and moderate on the receptive tasks (vocabulary and grammar). L1 exposure correlated positively with the vocabulary size and phonological processing. Grammar scores were not related to the levels of L1 exposure, but were predicted by general cognitive abilities. L2 exposure negatively influenced productive grammar in L1, suggesting possible L2 transfer effects on L1 grammatical performance. Children’s narrative skills benefitted from exposure to two languages: both L1 and L2 exposure influenced story structure scores in L1. Importantly, we did not find any evidence (in any of the tasks in which the gap was present) that the performance gap between monolinguals and bilinguals could be fully closed with high amounts of L1 input. (shrink)
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