“…Consistent with previous findings (e.g., Costa & Santesteban, 2004;Declerck et al, 2015;Gollan & Ferreira, 2009;Li & Gollan, 2018), this result suggests that unbalanced bilinguals exerted strong inhibition on the dominant language during the mixed language naming condition. It should be noted that there are different interpretations of the reversed language dominance effect: While some researchers argue it is a strong indicator of inhibition over the dominant language (e.g., Bobb & Wodniecka, 2013;Fu et al, 2017), other scholars suggest it could also be explained with alternative mechanisms (see Gade et al, 2021aGade et al, , 2021b for related discussions), such as persistent over-activation (e.g., Declerck et al, 2015;Declerck & Koch, 2023) or lower selection threshold for the weaker L2 (Costa & Santesteban, 2004). We suppose this effect reflects inhibition over the L1, as it converges with our ERP decoding data discussed below.…”