info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Psycholinguistic explorations of lexical translation equivalents: Thirty years of research and their implications for cognitive translatology
Fecha
2015-10Registro en:
García, Adolfo Martín; Psycholinguistic explorations of lexical translation equivalents: Thirty years of research and their implications for cognitive translatology; John Benjamins Publishing Company; Translation Spaces; 4; 1; 10-2015; 9-28
2211-3711
2211-372X
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
García, Adolfo Martín
Resumen
This paper reviews psycholinguistic research on lexical translation equivalents to show how accumulating evidence constrained successive models of interlingual processing. Three stages are identified in the development of the field. First, in the foundational era, three initial models of interlinguistic associations were postulated. Second, during the take-off era, pioneering experiments assessed the involvement of conceptual representations in forward translation. Third, the ongoing expansion era witnessed the rise of the revised hierarchical model, which inspired research showing that word translation is modulated by directionality, L2 competence, and the stimuli’s concreteness level and cognate status. Two additional issues that surfaced in this third era are of particular importance to cognitive translatology: the impact of translation expertise on word translation and the exploration of the neural basis of translation. Finally, the main findings are summarized and their methodological implications for empirical research within cognitive translatology are highlighted.