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Look and listen! The online processing of Korean case by native and non-native speakers
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In: ISSN: 2327-3798 ; EISSN: 2327-3801 ; Language, Cognition and Neuroscience ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02103505 ; Language, Cognition and Neuroscience, Taylor and Francis, 2018, 34 (3), pp.385-404. ⟨10.1080/23273798.2018.1549332⟩ (2018)
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The Role of Morphology in Word Recognition of Hebrew as a Templatic Language
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Pronoun processing in Anglophone late L2 learners of French: Behavioral and ERP evidence
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In: ISSN: 0911-6044 ; Journal of Neurolinguistics ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01485313 ; Journal of Neurolinguistics, Elsevier, 2015, Vol. 34, pp.15-40 (2015)
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Syntactic Competence and Processing: Constraints on Long-distance A-bar Dependencies in Bilinguals.
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Abstract:
This dissertation investigates the syntactic competence and processing of A-bar dependencies by Sinhala native speakers in their L2 English. The specific focus is on wh-dependencies (wh-questions and relative clauses) and topicalization, given that these phenomena are syntactically distinct across the two languages. Presenting novel results from a series of psycholinguistic experiments, the study reevaluates the predictive and explanatory power of two recent hypotheses in generative SLA —the Feature Interpretability Hypothesis (FIH) and the Shallow Structure Hypothesis (SSH)— which concern the kind of ultimate attainment possible in post-childhood L2 acquisition, regarding syntactic competence and real-time processing. The first part of the dissertation is a re-evaluation of the FIH, in particular the claim that post-childhood L2 learners fail to develop native-like underlying mental representations for the target language syntax because their access to UG is restricted in the domain of uninterpretable syntactic features. Two experiments (Grammaticality Judgment and Truth-value Judgment tasks) were conducted with thirty-eight Sinhala L1/English L2 speakers and a control group of thirty-one English monolinguals. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that highly proficient L2 speakers are capable of acquiring native-like syntactic competence even in those domains where L2 acquisition involves the mastery of a new uninterpretable feature. The fact that these L2ers have been able to overcome a poverty of the stimulus problem, imposed by both their L1 syntax and L2 input, implies that full access to UG is available in post-childhood L2 acquisition, against the predictions of the FIH. The second part of the dissertation re-evaluates a tenet of the Shallow Structure Hypothesis that in real-time processing of the target language, L2 speakers fail to build full-fledged syntactic representations, but instead over-rely on non-syntactic information (lexical semantics and contextual cues), unlike native speakers of a target language. Our results from two Self-paced Reading experiments with thirty-six bilinguals and thirty-nine monolinguals support the conclusion that advanced L2 learners are capable of building complex native-like syntactic representations during their real-time comprehension of the target language. Thus, the study concludes that neither the FIH nor the SSH can be maintained in the experimental L2 acquisition domain investigated in this dissertation. ; PhD ; Linguistics ; University of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies ; http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/116655/1/sujeewa_1.pdf
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Keyword:
Feature interpretability hypothesis; Humanities; L2 Sentence Processing; Linguistics; Second Language Acquisition; Shallow structure hypothesis; Sinhala; Syntax
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URL: https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/116655
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Second Language Acquisition of Korean Case by Learners with Different First Languages
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Generativism and Emergentism: Evidence From Second Language Acquisition Studies of Poverty of the Stimulus Phenomena
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Pronoun processing in Anglophone late L2 learners of French: Behavioral and ERP evidence
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In: EuroSLA 20 ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01507646 ; EuroSLA 20, Sep 2014, York, United Kingdom (2014)
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