In:The Internal Context of Bilingual Processing
John Truscott and Michael Sharwood Smith
[Bilingual Processing and Acquisition 8] 2019
► pp. 175–208
Chapter 8Control as inherently internal context
Part II. Self as controller
Published online: 26 August 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/bpa.8.c8
https://doi.org/10.1075/bpa.8.c8
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.The goal-based self as controller
- 2.1The goal-based self and dominance within it
- 2.2The goal-based self as language controller
- 3.The role of the meta-self
- 3.1The meta-self in cognitive control
- 3.2The meta-self in language control
- 4.Self-based and selfless cognitive control
- 4.1The nature of self-based control
- 4.2The process: Dynamic shifts in control
- 4.2.1Control in trouble-free processing
- 4.2.2Control with complications
- 4.2.3Value and emotion in self-based and selfless control
- 4.3An example of self-based and selfless control
- 4.4The use of metalinguistic knowledge as self-based processing
- 5.Self-based and selfless language control
- 5.1The nature of self-based language control
- 5.2Some examples of self-based language control
- 5.3A more extended example
- 5.4The case of switch costs
- 5.4.1Factors underlying switch costs
- 5.4.2A hypothesis
- 5.4.3Conclusion
- 5.5Interpreting
- 6.The affective self as controller
- 7.‘Self’ as controller?
- 7.1‘Self’ as cognitive controller?
- 7.2‘Self’ as language controller?
- 8.The L2 self
- 9.Conclusion
Notes
