114 research outputs found
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Production of tense marking in successive bilingual children: when do they converge with their monolingual peers?
Children with English as a second language (L2) with exposure of 18 months or less exhibit similar difficulties to children with Specific Language Impairment in tense marking, a marker of language impairment for English. This paper examines whether L2 children with longer exposure converge with their monolingual peers in the production of tense marking.
38 Turkish-English L2 children with a mean age of 7;8 and 33 monolingual age-matched controls completed the screening test of the Test of Early Grammatical Impairment (TEGI). The L2 children as a group were as accurate as the controls in the production of -ed, but performed significantly lower than the controls in the production of third person âs. Age and YoE affected the childrenâs performance. The highest age-expected performance on the TEGI was attested in eight and nine year-old children who had 4-6 YoE. L1 and L2 children performed better in regular compared to irregular verbs, but L2 children overregularized more than L1 children and were less sensitive to the phonological properties of verbs. The results show that tense marking and the screening test of the TEGI may be promising for differential diagnosis in eight and nine year-old L2 children with at least four YoE
Processing of regular and irregular past tense morphology in highly proficient second language learners of English: a self-paced reading study
Dual-system models suggest that English past tense morphology involves two processing routes: rule application for regular verbs and memory retrieval for irregular verbs (Pinker, 1999). In second language (L2) processing research, Ullman (2001a) suggested that both verb types are retrieved from memory, but more recently Clahsen and Felser (2006) and Ullman (2004) argued that past tense rule application can be automatised with experience by L2 learners. To address this controversy, we tested highly proficient Greek-English learners with naturalistic or classroom L2 exposure compared to native English speakers in a self-paced reading task involving past tense forms embedded in plausible sentences. Our results suggest that, irrespective to the type of exposure, proficient L2 learners of extended L2 exposure apply rule-based processing
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Rule-Based Morphological Processing in a Second Language: A Behavioural Investigation
According to dual-system accounts of English past-tense processing, regular forms are decomposed into their
stem and affix (played=play+ed) based on an implicit linguistic rule, whereas irregular forms (kept) are
retrieved directly from the mental lexicon. In second language (L2) processing research, it has been suggested
that L2 learners do not have rule-based decomposing abilities, so they process regular past-tense forms similarly to irregular ones (Silva & Clahsen 2008), without applying the morphological rule. The present study investigates morphological processing of regular and irregular verbs in Greek-English L2 learners and native English speakers. In a masked-priming experiment with regular and irregular prime-target verb pairs (playedplay/kept-keep), native speakers showed priming effects for regular pairs, compared to unrelated pairs,
indicating decomposition; conversely, L2 learners showed inhibitory effects. At the same time, both groups
revealed priming effects for irregular pairs. We discuss these findings in the light of available theories on L2
morphological processing
Cross-modal priming in bilingual sentence processing
This paper provides a concise overview of the cross-modal priming methodology, it presents a selection of key studies to illustrate how this method can be used to address lexical and syntactic processing and discusses advantages and disadvantages, along with issues that need to be taken into consideration when designing studies that address sentence processing in bilinguals
On the nature and cause of Specific Language Impairment: a view from sentence processing and infant research
This paper addresses the nature and cause of Specific Language Impairment (SLI) by reviewing recent research in sentence processing of children with SLI compared to typically developing (TD) children and research in infant speech perception. These studies have revealed that children with SLI are sensitive to syntactic, semantic, and real-world information, but do not show sensitivity to grammatical morphemes with low phonetic saliency, and they show longer reaction times than age-matched controls. TD children from the age of 4 show trace reactivation, but some children with SLI fail to show this effect, which resembles the pattern of adults and TD children with low working memory. Finally, findings from the German Language Development (GLAD) Project have revealed that a group of children at risk for SLI had a history of an auditory delay and impaired processing of prosodic information in the first months of their life, which is not detectable later in life. Although this is a single project that needs to be replicated with a larger group of children, it provides preliminary support for accounts of SLI which make an explicit link between an early deficit in the processing of phonology and later language deficits, and the Computational Complexity Hypothesis that argues that the language deficit in children with SLI lies in difficulties integrating different types of information at the interfaces
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Production of relative clauses in monolingual Turkish children
Research on the production of relative clauses (RCs) has shown that in English, although children
start using intransitive RCs at an earlier age, more complex, bi-propositional object RCs appear later
(Hamburger & Crain, 1982; Diessel and Tomasello, 2005), and children use resumptive pronouns
both in acceptable and unacceptable ways (McKee, McDaniel, & Snedeker, 1998; McKee &
McDaniel, 2001).
To date, it is unclear whether or not the same picture emerges in Turkish, a language with an SOV
word-order and overt case marking. Some studies suggested that subject RCs are more frequent in
adults and children (Slobin, 1986) and yield a better performance than object RCs (Ăzcan, 1996), but
others reported the opposite pattern (Ekmekçi, 1990). Our study addresses this issue in Turkish
children and adults, and uses participantsâ errors to account for the emerging asymmetry between
subject and object RCs.
37 5-to-8 year old monolingual Turkish children and 23 adult controls participated in a novel
elicitation task involving cards, each consisting of four different pictures (see Figure 1). There were
two sets of cards, one for the participant and one for the researcher. The former had animals with
accessories (e.g., a hat) whereas the latter had no accessories. Participants were instructed to hold
their card without showing it to the researcher and describe the animals with particular accessories.
This prompted the use of subject and object RCs. The researcher had to identify the animals in her
card (see Figure 2).
A preliminary repeated measures ANOVA with the factor Group (pre-school, primary-school
children) showed no differences between the groups in the use of RCs (p>.1), who were therefore
collapsed into one for further analyses. A repeated measures ANOVA with the factors Group
(children, adults) and RC-Type (Subject, Object) showed that children used fewer RCs than adults
(F(1,58)=7.54, p<.01), and both groups used fewer object than subject RCs (F(1,58)=22.46, p<.001),
but there was no Group by RC-Type interaction (see Figure 3). A similar ANOVA on the rate of
grammatical RCs showed a main effect of Group (F(1,58)=77.25, p<.001), a main effect of RC-Type
(F(1,58)=66.33, p<.001), and an interaction of Group by RC-Type (F(1,58)=64.6, p<.001) (see
Figure 4). Children made more errors than adults in object RCs (F(1,58)=87.01, p<.001), and
children made more errors in object compared to subject RCs (F(1,36)=106.35, p<.001), but adults
did not show this asymmetry. The error analysis revealed that children systematically avoided the
object-relativizing morpheme âDIK, which requires possessive agreement with the genitive-marked
subject. They also used resumptive pronouns and resumptive full-DPs in the extraction site similarly
to English children (see Figure 5).
These findings are in line with Slobin (1986) and Ăzcan (1996). Childrenâs errors suggest that they
avoid morphosyntactic complexity of object RCs and try to preserve the canonical word order by
inserting resumptive pronouns in the extraction site. Finally, cross-linguistic similarity in the
acquisition of RCs in typologically different languages suggests a higher accessibility of subject RCs
both at the structural (Keenan and Comrie, 1977) and conceptual level (Bock and Warren, 1986)
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On-line processing of articles and clitic pronouns by Greek children with SLI
Sentence repetition in Farsi-English bilingual children
The current study aimed to create an assessment that can be used in the future to measure the language abilities of Farsi-speaking children in a clinical setting. A Farsi sentence-repetition task was created that included structures organised into three levels of complexity from least to most complex. Twenty typically developing Farsi-English bilingual children between the ages of 6;3â11;6 were recruited from Farsi schools in Toronto, Canada. Signi cant di erences on the participantsâ performance among the three levels were found with the lowest performance in the most complex sentences and the highest performance in the least complex ones. Speci c structures appeared to be more challenging than others within each level of complexity. The childrenâs decreasing performance with increasing complexity and the evidence that speci c structures are challenging within each level make the Farsi sentence repetition task a promising tool for assessing the language skills of Farsi-English speaking children
Comprehension of reflexives and pronouns in sequential bilingual children: do they pattern similarly to L1 children, L2 adults, or children with specific language impairment?
This paper investigates how sequential bilingual (L2) Turkish-English children comprehend English reflexives and pronouns and tests whether they pattern similarly to monolingual (L1) children, L2 adults, or children with Specific Language Impairment (SLI).
Thirty nine 6- to 9-year-old L2 children with an age of onset of 30-48 months and exposure to English of 30-72 months and 33 L1 age-matched control children completed the Advanced Syntactic Test of Pronominal Reference-Revised (van der Lely, 1997). The L2 childrenâs performance was compared to L2 adults from Demirci (2001) and children with SLI from van der Lely & Stollwerck (1997).
The L2 childrenâs performance in the comprehension of reflexives was almost identical to their age-matched controls, and differed from L2 adults and children with SLI. In the comprehension of pronouns, L2 children showed an asymmetry between referential and quantificational NPs, a pattern attested in younger L1 children and children with SLI. Our study provides evidence that the development of comprehension of reflexives and pronouns in these children resembles monolingual L1 acquisition and not adult L2 acquisition or acquisition of children with SLI
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