2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9922.2009.00554.x
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Second Language Acquisition of Gender Agreement in Explicit and Implicit Training Conditions: An Event‐Related Potential Study

Abstract: This study employed an artificial language learning paradigm together with a combined behavioral/event-related potential (ERP) approach to examine the neurocognition of the processing of gender agreement, an aspect of inflectional morphology that is problematic in adult second language (L2) learning. Subjects learned to speak and comprehend an artificial language under either explicit (classroomlike) or implicit (immersionlike) training conditions. In each group, both noun-article and noun-adjective gender agr… Show more

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Cited by 246 publications
(221 citation statements)
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References 81 publications
(188 reference statements)
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“…These findings suggest that speakers of English activate a computational mechanism to process regular forms (by concatenating a base to a suffix: walk + ed in language production or decomposing the items into their morphological constituents in language comprehension), but rely on memory to process irregular forms. Research on languages other than English has shown a similar pattern (BOWDEN, 2007;MORGAN-SHORT et al, 2010;EISENBEISS;SONNENSTUHL, 1997). Other findings, however, contradict such claims.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 45%
“…These findings suggest that speakers of English activate a computational mechanism to process regular forms (by concatenating a base to a suffix: walk + ed in language production or decomposing the items into their morphological constituents in language comprehension), but rely on memory to process irregular forms. Research on languages other than English has shown a similar pattern (BOWDEN, 2007;MORGAN-SHORT et al, 2010;EISENBEISS;SONNENSTUHL, 1997). Other findings, however, contradict such claims.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 45%
“…In contrast to many artificial grammar learning paradigms, the artificial language Brocanto2, modeled after the artificial language Brocanto (Friederici, Steinhauer, & Pfeifer, 2002), is based on universal requirements of a natural language and is fully productive and meaningful. Previous research with these artificial languages has shown that learners evidence processing patterns that are similar to those found in natural language processing (Friederici et al, 2002;Morgan-Short, Finger, et al, 2012;Morgan-Short et al, 2010;Morgan-Short, Steinhauer, et al, 2012), suggesting the use of Brocanto2 in the current study has ecological validity in regard to L2 acquisition. At the same time, the use of the artificial language allows learners to reach high proficiency in a shortened amount of time and allows for control over confounding variables as compared to natural languages.…”
Section: Artificial Languagementioning
confidence: 70%
“…The artificial language learned by participants was Brocanto2 (Morgan-Short, Faretta-Stutenberg, et al, 2014;Morgan-Short, Finger, et al, 2012;Morgan-Short et al, 2010). In contrast to many artificial grammar learning paradigms, the artificial language Brocanto2, modeled after the artificial language Brocanto (Friederici, Steinhauer, & Pfeifer, 2002), is based on universal requirements of a natural language and is fully productive and meaningful.…”
Section: Artificial Languagementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The literature on L2 learning of morphosyntax has consistently shown that adults can acquire nonnative word orders (including form-meaning mappings) through relative brief exposure to an AL, although mixed results have been found for inflectional morphology (Boyd, Gottschalk & Goldberg, 2009;DeGraaf, 1997;DeKeyser, 1995;Friederici, Steinhauer & Pfeifer, 2002;Grey, Williams & Rebuschat, 2014;Morgan-Short, 2007;Morgan-Short, Sanz, Steinhauer & Ullman, 2010;Rebuschat & Williams, 2012;Rogers, Révész & Rebuschat, 2015;Williams & Kuribara, 2008). Williams and Kuribara (2008) used Japlish, a semi-artificial language with English lexis and Japanese morphosyntax (word order and case) in a single-session design.…”
Section: Adult Studies Adopting Miniature-language Paradigmsmentioning
confidence: 99%