Examining second language development using event-related potentials

Author:

Gabriele Alison1,Fiorentino Robert1,Bañón José Alemán1

Affiliation:

1. University of Kansas

Abstract

This cross-sectional study examines the role of L1-L2 differences and structural distance in the processing of gender and number agreement by English-speaking learners of Spanish at three different levels of proficiency. Preliminary results show that differences between the L1 and L2 impact L2 development, as sensitivity to gender agreement violations, as opposed to number agreement violations, emerges only in learners at advanced levels of proficiency. Results also show that the establishment of agreement dependencies is impacted by the structural distance between the agreeing elements for native speakers and for learners at intermediate and advanced levels of proficiency but not for low proficiency. The overall pattern of results suggests that the linguistic factors examined here impact development but do not constrain ultimate attainment; for advanced learners, results suggest that second language processing is qualitatively similar to native processing.

Publisher

John Benjamins Publishing Company

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference80 articles.

1. The processing of number and gender agreement in Spanish: An event-related potential investigation of the effects of structural distance;Alemán Bañón;Brain Research,2012

2. Alemán Bañón, J., Fiorentino, R., & Gabriele, A. (submitted). Morphosyntactic processing in advanced L2 learners: An event-related potential investigation of the effects of L1-L2 similarity and structural distance.

3. Cortical brain responses to semantic incongruity and syntactic violation in Italian language: An event-related potential study;Angrilli;Neuroscience Letters,2002

4. Grammatical gender and number agreement in Spanish: An ERP comparison;Barber;Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience,2005

5. Event-related potentials, semantic processes, and expectancy factors in word recognition;Bentin;Brain and Language,1987

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