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Predicting proficiency (Neveu et al., 2025)

Citation

My thoughts

Summary

This paper looked at different objective tests (e.g., MINT Sprint, lexical-decision, category fluency, etc) for language dominance, balance, English and Spanish proficiency, tested on Oral Proficiency Interview (OPI), and which one tends to be the strongest predictor. They tested 80 Spanish-English bilinguals and found that MINT Sprint tends to be the strongest predictor, and lexical decision and category fluency (which is time-consuming to score) come next. They found that bilinguals who said their spoken proficiency is balanced tended to be more balanced on objective measures than bilinguals who said they were English-dominant, and bilinguals who self-rated as balanced tended to be objectively less balanced than bilinguals who self-reported they are Spanish-dominant. There is an overall superiority of objective than self-report measures, which replicates previous studies of Gollan et al., 2023 on MINT-Sprint studies. No self-report measure outperformed the MINT-Sprint as a single predictor for any of the four measures of interest (dominance, balance, Spanish, and English). MINT-Sprint was strong for predicting language dominance, and LDT added predictive power for balanced and Spanish scores; category fluency contributed to the prediction of English scores. This could be due to the differences between tasks, such as for production tasks (e.g., picture naming) it requires the speaker to go from concepts to words, and for letter fluency task it requires speakers to search lexicon in real words and non-words but not production, which is more vulnerable to language switches and testing order effects, which would be measures for cognitive processing but not to language proficiency.

Key Concepts

Research Aim

There is no standardized method for measuring language proficiency on bilingualism; researchers do not agree on how proficiency should be measured, different bilinguals tend to interpret self-rating scales differently, and self-ratings of proficiency (e.g., LEAP-Q) tend to be subjective and vulnerable. This study is designed to determine which objective measures

Method

Analyses

Results