Affiliation:
1. University of Hawaiˈi at Mānoa
2. Kent State University
Abstract
Abstract
The bulk of second language (L2) vocabulary learning happens incidentally through reading (Rott, 2007; Webb, 2008), but individual differences, such as
prior knowledge, modulate the efficacy of such incidental learning. One individual difference that is strongly predicted to play a
role in L2 vocabulary is declarative memory ability; however, links between these two abilities have not been explored (Hamrick, Lum, & Ullman, 2018). This study considered declarative memory in conjunction with varying degrees of prior knowledge, since declarative memory may serve a compensatory function (Ullman & Pullman, 2015). L2 Spanish learners completed measures of prior Spanish
vocabulary knowledge, declarative memory ability, and incidental L2 vocabulary learning. The results suggest that better
declarative memory predicts better immediate learning in general and better vocabulary retention two days later, but only for
those with more prior knowledge, consistent with the Matthew Effect previously reported in the literature (Stanovich, 1986).
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Cognitive Neuroscience,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
8 articles.
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