ERIC Number: EJ1017895
Record Type: Journal
Publication Date: 2014-Jan
Pages: 21
Abstractor: As Provided
ISBN: N/A
ISSN: ISSN-1366-7289
EISSN: N/A
Early Language Experience Facilitates the Processing of Gender Agreement in Spanish Heritage Speakers
Montrul, Silvina; Davidson, Justin; De La Fuente, Israel; Foote, Rebecca
Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, v17 n1 p118-138 Jan 2014
We examined how age of acquisition in Spanish heritage speakers and L2 learners interacts with implicitness vs. explicitness of tasks in gender processing of canonical and non-canonical ending nouns. Twenty-three Spanish native speakers, 29 heritage speakers, and 33 proficiency-matched L2 learners completed three on-line spoken word recognition experiments involving gender monitoring, grammaticality judgment, and word repetition. All three experimental tasks required participants to listen to grammatical and ungrammatical Spanish noun phrases (determiner-adjective-noun) but systematically varied the type of response required of them. The results of the Gender Monitoring Task (GMT) and the Grammaticality Judgment Task (GJT) revealed significant grammaticality effects for all groups in accuracy and speed, but in the Word Repetition Task (WRT), the native speakers and the heritage speakers showed a grammaticality effect, while the L2 learners did not. Noun canonicity greatly affected processing in the two experimental groups. We suggest that input frequency and reduced language use affect retrieval of non-canonical ending nouns from declarative memory in L2 learners and heritage speakers more so than in native speakers. Native-like processing of gender in the WRT by the heritage speakers is likely related to context of acquisition and particular experience with oral production.
Descriptors: Grammar, Language Processing, Nouns, Spanish, Native Speakers, Second Language Learning, Word Recognition, Language Research, Listening Skills, Phrase Structure, Task Analysis, Accuracy, Language Proficiency, Oral Language, Language Usage, Memory, Linguistic Input, Comparative Analysis, Learning Experience, Language Acquisition
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Publication Type: Journal Articles; Reports - Research
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Language: English
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