The role of proficiency and working memory in gender and number agreement processing in L1 and L2 Spanish

被引:128
作者
Sagarra, Nuria [1 ]
Herschensohn, Julia [2 ]
机构
[1] Penn State Univ, Dept Spanish Italian & Portuguese, University Pk, PA 16802 USA
[2] Univ Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
关键词
Grammatical gender; Grammatical number; L2; Spanish; Adjective agreement; Language processing; Working memory; GRAMMATICAL GENDER; 2ND-LANGUAGE ACQUISITION; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; WORD RECOGNITION; INFLECTED WORDS; READING SPAN; LANGUAGE; COMPREHENSION; GERMAN; REPRESENTATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.lingua.2010.02.004
中图分类号
H0 [语言学];
学科分类号
030303 ; 0501 ; 050102 ;
摘要
Most adult learners cannot attain native competence in a second language (L2). Some approaches maintain that L2 learners cannot access features unavailable in L1 after puberty (Hawkins and Franceschina, 2004) and that they process only superficial structures (Clahsen and Felser, 2006), due to a maturationally constrained critical period for L2 acquisition. in contrast, other approaches hold that late learners may acquire all L2 grammatical features (White et al., 2004) and that they may gain complex structural processing (Hopp, 2007). This study aims to test these models and to investigate the role of language proficiency and working memory on adult L2 acquisition. Beginning and intermediate adult English-speaking learners of Spanish and Spanish monolinguals completed a self-paced reading (online) and a grammaticality judgment task (offline) containing sentences with noun-adjective gender/number agreement/disagreement. The results revealed that all participants were highly accurate in the offline task, but only intermediates and Spanish monolinguals showed sensitivity to gender and number violations in the online task. In addition, intermediates with higher working memory were more accurate on some comprehension questions. These findings indicate that adult learners can develop processing patterns qualitatively similar to those of native speakers and that proficiency and working memory influence their acquisition. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:2022 / 2039
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
[41]   Processing syntactic and semantic information in the L2: Evidence for differential cue-weighting in the L1 and L2 [J].
Deniz, Nazik Dinctopal .
BILINGUALISM-LANGUAGE AND COGNITION, 2022, 25 (05) :713-725
[42]   Bidirectional influence on L1 Spanish and L2 English stop perception: The role of L2 experience [J].
Gorba, Celia .
JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 2019, 145 (06) :EL587-EL592
[44]   Investigating the contribution of L1 fluency, L2 initial fluency, working memory and phonological memory to L2 fluency development [J].
Gagne, Nancy ;
French, Leif M. ;
Hummel, Kirsten M. .
LANGUAGE TEACHING RESEARCH, 2025, 29 (02) :633-656
[45]   L1 AND L2 WORD RECOGNITION IN FINNISH Examining L1 Effects on L2 Processing of Morphological Complexity and Morphophonological Transparency [J].
Vainio, Seppo ;
Pajunen, Anneli ;
Hyona, Jukka .
STUDIES IN SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION, 2014, 36 (01) :133-162
[46]   Grammatical gender processing in L2 speakers of Spanish The role of cognate status and gender transparency [J].
Halberstadt, Lauren ;
Kroff, Jorge R. Valdes ;
Dussias, Paola E. .
JOURNAL OF SECOND LANGUAGE STUDIES, 2018, 1 (01) :5-30
[47]   The processing and representation of verbal inflection: Data from L1 and L2 Spanish [J].
Yaden, Bridget .
HISPANIA-A JOURNAL DEVOTED TO THE TEACHING OF SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE, 2007, 90 (04) :795-808
[48]   The neurocognitive mechanisms of semantic gender processing in L1 and L2 personal nouns by Chinese-English bilinguals [J].
Yu, Zhibin ;
Dong, Yanping .
LANGUAGE COGNITION AND NEUROSCIENCE, 2019, 34 (07) :901-915
[49]   Individual differences in L2 achievement mirror individual differences in L1 skills and L2 aptitude: Crosslinguistic transfer of L1 to L2 skills [J].
Sparks, Richard L. ;
Patton, Jon ;
Luebbers, Julie .
FOREIGN LANGUAGE ANNALS, 2019, 52 (02) :255-283
[50]   WORD FREQUENCY, COLLOCATIONAL FREQUENCY, L1 CONGRUENCY, AND PROFICIENCY IN L2 COLLOCATIONAL PROCESSING WHAT ACCOUNTS FOR L2 PERFORMANCE? [J].
Wolter, Brent ;
Yamashita, Junko .
STUDIES IN SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION, 2018, 40 (02) :395-416