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Free classification as a method for investigating the perception of nonnative sounds Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-03-27 Danielle Daidone, Ryan Lidster, Franziska Kruger
Our study proposes the use of a free classification task for investigating the dimensions used by listeners in their perception of nonnative sounds and for predicting the perceptual discriminability of nonnative contrasts. In a free classification task, participants freely group auditory stimuli based on their perceived similarity. The results can be used to predict discriminability and can be compared
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Language proficiency modulates listeners’ selective attention to a talker’s mouth: A conceptual replication of Birulés et al. (2020) Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-03-27 Theres Grüter, Jieun Kim, Hitoshi Nishizawa, Jue Wang, Raed Alzahrani, Yu-Tzu Chang, Hoan Nguyen, Michaela Nuesser, Akari Ohba, Sachiko Roos, Mayuko Yusa
This study presents a conceptual replication of Birulés et al.’s (2020, Experiment 2) investigation of native and nonnative listeners’ selective attention to a talker’s mouth with the goal of better understanding the potentially modulating role of proficiency in listeners’ reliance on audiovisual speech cues. Listeners’ eye gaze was recorded while watching two short videos. Findings from one of the
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Reevaluating trials to criterion as a measure in second language research Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-03-27 Nick Henry
Research on input processing and processing instruction has often employed a scoring method known as trials to criterion to observe the effects of instruction that emerge during training. Despite its common use in this research (see Fernández, 2021) this metric has never been evaluated critically. The present study first discusses several challenges associated with trials to criterion, including issues
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The relationship between social network typology, L2 proficiency growth, and curriculum design in university study abroad Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-03-03 Tripp Strawbridge
This study utilizes social network analysis to characterize a typology of study abroad sojourner experience, detailing the relationship of social experience types to second language (L2) proficiency growth and study abroad program design. In contrast with previous research, the study performs a quantitative analysis of structural and compositional network features to identify a typology of social networks
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The prediction from MLAT to L2 achievement is largely due to MLAT assessment of underlying L1 abilities Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-03-02 Richard L. Sparks, Philip S. Dale
Widespread use of the Modern Language Aptitude Test (MLAT) in L2 studies of individual differences implicitly assumes that L2 aptitude is a distinct cognitive facet. There is considerable evidence for prediction from L1 abilities to L2 learning. In this longitudinal study, L1-MLAT-L2 relations were examined in 307 US secondary students based on six L1 and six L2 measures of language and literacy, and
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Variability as a functional marker of second language development in older adult learners Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-02-15 Simone E. Pfenninger, Maria Kliesch
This longitudinal study with time-serial data examines for the first time whether different types of intraindividual variation in second language (L2) performance and cognitive functioning are related, and how and when they influence L2 development longitudinally in older adulthood. We analyzed the L2 development of 26 German-speaking adults aged 62–79 who were taught L2 English for 2 × 90 minutes
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Development of automaticity in processing L2 collocations: The roles of L1 collocational knowledge and practice condition Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-01-27 Hyojin Jeong, Robert DeKeyser
This study examined the development of automaticity in processing L2 collocations, and the roles of L1 collocational knowledge and practice conditions in the development process. Korean learners of English were assigned to one of two practice conditions (practice in identical or varied contexts). The learning gains for word combinations with and without equivalent counterparts in the L1 (L1-only and
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Construction and validation of a questionnaire to study engagement in informal second language learning Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-01-26 Henriette L. Arndt
This article reports on the development and validation of the Informal Second Language Engagement questionnaire (ISLE) for capturing various aspects of learner engagement with informal second language practices. Whereas other questionnaires have primarily focused on learner behavior (the frequency, quantity, and diversity of informal activities in which learners engage), the ISLE additionally targets
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Scale quality in second-language anxiety and WTC: A methodological synthesis Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-01-17 Ekaterina Sudina
As survey research in second language acquisition grows in popularity, the adherence to best practices associated with questionnaire quality is critical for a better understanding of factors that influence second language (L2) development. To ensure that a self-report scale targets the construct of interest and does it consistently and accurately, authors of primary research should demonstrate that
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Predicting L2-Spanish fluency from L1-English fluency and L2 proficiency: A conceptual replication Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-01-09 Susana Pérez Castillejo, Katherine Urzua-Parra
This study conceptually replicated Huensch and Tracy-Ventura’s (2017) analysis of the relationship between L1 and L2 utterance fluency with adult L1-English learners of Spanish. Data from 88 participants were analyzed to explore the proportion of the variance in L2 fluency measures that can be attributed to the corresponding L1 measures, and the relative weights of L1 fluency and L2 proficiency as
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Scrutinizing LLAMA D as a measure of implicit learning aptitude Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-01-09 Takehiro Iizuka, Robert DeKeyser
Since Gisela Granena’s influential work, LLAMA D v2, a sound recognition subtest of LLAMA aptitude tests, has been used as a measure of implicit learning aptitude in second language acquisition research. The validity of this test, however, is little known and the results of studies with this instrument have been somewhat inconsistent. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that researchers’ variable
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Quantifying proper nouns’ influence on L2 English learners’ reading fluency Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-01-03 Christopher Nicklin, Allie Patterson, Stuart McLean
Proper nouns constitute a lexical class with special properties and are thus treated differently from other words by second language acquisition researchers. An assumption exists that even low-proficiency learners will find them unproblematic, yet research suggests this assumption might be misplaced. The present study involved two self-paced reading experiments designed to investigate proper nouns’
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Domain-general auditory processing as a conceptual and measurement framework for second language speech learning aptitude: A test-retest reliability study Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-12-27 Kazuya Saito, Adam Tierney
This article proposes a conceptual and measurement framework for postpubertal, L2 speech learning aptitude that is centered around domain-general auditory processing (i.e., representing spectral and temporal characteristics of sounds). To this end, we examine the construct and reliability of a battery of auditory processing tests by presenting the results of an empirical study wherein 100 participants
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Perceptual integrality of foreign segmental and tonal information: Dimensional transfer hypothesis Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-12-27 William Choi, Rachel Ka-Ying Tsui
This study investigates whether (a) Cantonese and (b) English listeners integrally or independently perceive Thai tone and segmental information. Listeners completed a modified AX discrimination task that contained a control block (without segmental variation) and an orthogonal block (with segmental variation). Relative to their own performance in the control block, the Cantonese listeners showed increased
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Second language anxiety in conversation and its relationship with speakers’ perceptions of the interaction and their social networks Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-12-23 Rachael Lindberg, Kim McDonough, Pavel Trofimovich
Second language (L2) researchers have long acknowledged the role of language anxiety in communication processes, such that learners with greater language anxiety tend to be less willing to engage in communication. However, little research has explored links between L2 speakers’ perceptions of conversation and dynamic measures of anxiety. Therefore, this study measured 60 L2 English speakers’ galvanic
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Individual differences modulate sensitivity to implicit causality bias in both native and nonnative processing Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-12-09 Tingting Wang, Alison Gabriele
The question of whether L2 learners can use discourse cues online during pronoun resolution remains debated in the field. We examine one factor that has been argued to impact pronoun resolution in native speakers, implicit causality (IC) bias, a property related to certain verbs in which one of verb’s arguments are considered to be the cause of an action. We investigate whether individual differences
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Age effects in spoken second language vocabulary attainment beyond the critical period Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-11-14 Kazuya Saito
The current study set out to examine to what degree age of acquisition (AOA), defined as a learner’s first intensive exposure to a second language (L2) environment, mediates the final state of postpubertal, spoken vocabulary attainment. In Study 1, spontaneous speech samples were elicited from experienced Japanese users of English (n = 41) using storytelling and interview tasks. The samples were analyzed
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The complexity epistemology and ontology in second language acquisition: A critical review Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-11-02 ZhaoHong Han, Eun Young Kang, Sarah Sok
Complex Dynamic Systems Theory (CDST), an instantiation in applied linguistics of complexity epistemology that transcends disciplinary boundaries, has gained much traction and momentum over the last decade, finding expressions in a fast-growing number of empirical second language developmental studies. However, the literature, while rapidly expanding, has displayed much confusion, notably oscillating
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Network analysis for modeling complex systems in SLA research Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-10-14 Lani Freeborn, Sible Andringa, Gabriela Lunansky, Judith Rispens
Network analysis is a method used to explore the structural relationships between people or organizations, and more recently between psychological constructs. Network analysis is a novel technique that can be used to model psychological constructs that influence language learning as complex systems, with longitudinal data, or cross-sectional data. The majority of complex dynamic systems theory (CDST)
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Comparing the longitudinal development of phraseological complexity across oral and written tasks Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-10-13 Nathan Vandeweerd, Alex Housen, Magali Paquot
This study builds upon previous research investigating the construct validity of phraseological complexity as an index of L2 development and proficiency. Whereas previous studies have focused on cross-sectional comparisons of written productions across proficiency levels, the current study compares the longitudinal development of phraseological complexity in written and oral productions elicited over
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Second language productive knowledge of collocations: Does knowledge of individual words matter? Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-10-10 Suhad Sonbul, Dina Abdel Salam El-Dakhs, Ahmed Masrai
Recent studies suggest that developing L2 receptive knowledge of single words is associated with increased receptive knowledge of collocations. However, no study to date has directly examined the interrelationship between productive word knowledge and productive collocation knowledge. To address this gap, the present study administered a controlled productive word test and a controlled productive collocation
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Learning words with unfamiliar orthography: The role of cognitive abilities Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-10-07 Marie-Josée Bisson
Research suggests new foreign language (FL) words are learned more easily if their phonology follows the phonotactic rules of the native language. Very little is known, however, about the impact of orthography on FL learning. This study investigated the cognitive mechanisms supporting the learning of words with familiar and unfamiliar orthographies. Participants took part in learning and meaning recall
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A longitudinal study into learners’ productive collocation knowledge in L2 German and factors affecting the learning Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-10-06 Griet Boone, Vanessa De Wilde, June Eyckmans
This longitudinal study explored the roles of item- and learner-related variables in L2 learners’ development of productive collocation knowledge (L1 = Dutch; L2 = German; NLearners= 50). Learners’ form recall knowledge of 35 target collocations was measured three times over a 3-year period. The item-related variables investigated were L1-L2 congruency, corpus frequency, association strength, and imageability
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The importance of psychological and social factors in adult SLA: The case of productive collocation knowledge in L2 Swedish of L1 French long-term residents Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-09-30 Fanny Forsberg Lundell, Klara Arvidsson, Andreas Jemstedt
The study investigates how psychological and social factors relate to productive collocation knowledge in late L2 learners of Swedish (French L1) (N = 59). The individual factors are language aptitude (measured through the LLAMA aptitude test), reported language use, social networks, acculturation, and personality. Multiple linear regression analysis showed that positive effects were found for LLAMA
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Explicit Instruction within a Task: Before, During, or After? Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-09-15 Gabriel Michaud, Ahlem Ammar
This study addresses the effects of the timing of explicit instruction within the three phases of a task cycle (pretask, task, posttask) while considering learner’s previous knowledge. Eight intact groups (N = 165) of French L2 university-level students (4 B1- and 4 B2-level groups) completed two tasks. Groups were formed according to previous knowledge. Three groups received explicit instruction on
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Sources and effects of foreign language enjoyment, anxiety, and boredom: A structural equation modeling approach Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-09-07 Jean-Marc Dewaele, Elouise Botes, Samuel Greiff
The present study is among the first to investigate how three foreign language (FL) emotions, namely FL enjoyment (FLE), anxiety (FLCA), and boredom (FLB), are related to each other. It is the first study to consider how the three FL emotions are shaped by one learner-internal variable (attitude toward the FL), by two perceived teacher behaviors (frequency of use of the FL in class and unpredictability)
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Wh-Dependency Processing in a Naturalistic Exposure Context: Sensitivity to Abstract Syntactic Structure in High-Working-Memory L2 Speakers Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-08-15 Robyn Berghoff
This study replicates Felser and Roberts (2007), which used a cross-modal picture priming task to examine indirect-object dependency processing in classroom L2 learners. The replication focuses on early L2 learners with extensive naturalistic L2 exposure (n = 22)—an understudied group in the literature—and investigates whether these learners, in contrast to those in the original study, reactivate the
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The elusive impact of L2 immersion on translation priming Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-07-18 Adel Chaouch-Orozco, Jorge González Alonso, Jon Andoni Duñabeitia, Jason Rothman
A growing consensus sees the bilingual lexicon as an integrated, nonselective system. However, the way bilingual experience shapes the architecture and functioning of the lexicon is not well understood. This study investigates bilingual lexical-semantic representation and processing employing written translation priming. We focus on the role of active exposure to and use of the second language (L2)—primarily
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The relationship between poststimulus pause, learner proficiency, and working memory in an Elicited Imitation Task Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-07-14 John M. Norris, Shoko Sasayama, Michelle Kim
The Elicited Imitation Task (EIT) is a popular technique for efficiently measuring global proficiency in multiple languages, and accumulated evidence indicates high reliability and strong relationships with other proficiency measures. Nevertheless, several dimensions of EIT design remain open to investigation, including the assumption that a pause is required in between the aural stimulus and oral
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Effects of distributed practice on the acquisition of verb-noun collocations Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-06-30 Satoshi Yamagata, Tatsuya Nakata, James Rogers
Given the importance of collocational knowledge for second language learning, how collocation learning can be facilitated is an important question. The present study examined the effects of three different practice schedules on collocation learning: node massed, collocation massed, and collocation spaced. In the node-massed schedule, three collocations for the same node verb were studied on the same
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“Bread and butter” or “butter and bread”? Nonnatives’ processing of novel lexical patterns in context Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-06-22 Suhad Sonbul, Dina Abdel Salam El-Dakhs, Kathy Conklin, Gareth Carrol
Little is known about how nonnative speakers process novel language patterns in the input they encounter. The present study examines whether nonnatives develop a sensitivity to novel binomials and their ordering preference from context. Thirty-nine nonnative speakers of English (L1 Arabic) read three short stories seeded with existing binomials (black and white) and novel ones (bags and coats) while
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Revisiting the moderating effect of speaker proficiency on the relationships among intelligibility, comprehensibility, and accentedness in L2 Spanish Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-06-15 Amanda Huensch, Charlie Nagle
This report examines the potential impacts of task and proficiency on listener judgments of intelligibility, comprehensibility, and accentedness in L2 Spanish. This study extends Huensch and Nagle [Language Learning, 71, 626–668, (2021)], who explored the partial independence among the global speech dimensions for speech samples taken from a picture narrative task. Given that the type of speaking task
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A role for verb regularity in the L2 processing of the Spanish subjunctive mood: Evidence from eye-tracking Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-05-20 Sara Fernández Cuenca, Jill Jegerski
The present study investigated the second language processing of grammatical mood in Spanish. Eye-movement data from a group of advanced proficiency second language users revealed nativelike processing with irregular verb stimuli but not with regular verb stimuli. A comparison group of native speakers showed the expected effect with both types of stimuli, but these were slightly more robust with irregular
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Proficiency, language of assessment, and attention to meaning and form during L2 comprehension: Methodological considerations in L2 replication research Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-05-17 Paweł Szudarski, Sylwia Mikołajczak
This study is a replication and extension of Morgan-Short et al.’s (2018) investigation into the role of attention in input processing by L1-Polish learners of L2-Spanish, with proficiency and language of assessment explored as two key methodological factors. Our aims were twofold: to investigate learners’ comprehension in different conditions with their L2 proficiency controlled for, and to examine
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A closer look at a marginalized test method: Self-assessment as a measure of speaking proficiency Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-04-28 Paula Winke, Xiaowan Zhang, Steven J. Pierce
Second language (L2) teachers may shy away from self-assessments because of warnings that students are not accurate self-assessors. This information stems from meta-analyses in which self-assessment scores on average did not correlate highly with proficiency test results. However, researchers mostly used Pearson correlations, when polyserial could be used. Furthermore, self-assessments today can be
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The effects of proficiency level and dual-task condition on L2 self-monitoring behavior Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-04-27 Ghadah Albarqi, Parvaneh Tavakoli
The current study examined the effects of task condition (TC; single vs. dual) and proficiency level (PL) on self-monitoring of second language (L2) speakers. Data were collected from sixty-six female L2 learners of English performing two speaking tasks under two task conditions. While performance in the single-task condition involved only narrating a picture-based oral narrative, the dual-task condition
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Text recall and use of advance organisers in first and second language Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-04-19 Sara Dhaene, Evy Woumans
Previous research identified that studying texts in a second language (L2) as opposed to the first (L1) results in substantially weaker recall. We hypothesized that use of advance organizers (AOs) might attenuate this L2 recall cost by supporting L2 users in the construction of more solid memory representations. One hundred Dutch-English bilinguals studied two texts in either L1 or L2, and with or
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The additive use of prosody and morphosyntax in L2 German Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Nick Henry
Abstract This study investigates whether the use of prosodic cues during instruction facilitates the processing of German accusative case markers. Two groups of third semester L1 English learners of L2 German completed Processing Instruction (PI) with aural input: Learners in the PI+P group heard sentences that included focused prosodic cues; learners in the PI group heard sentences with monotone prosody
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Individual differences in the acquisition of language-specific and dialect-specific allophones of intervocalic /d/ by L2 and heritage Spanish speakers studying abroad in Sevilla Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-03-30 Brendan Regan
Abstract This study examines the role of language proficiency and other individual factors (attitudes, input) in the acquisition of language-specific [ð] and dialect-specific [∅] allophones of Spanish intervocalic /d/ in the /ado/ context by L2 and heritage Spanish speakers during a short-term study abroad in Sevilla, Spain. Twenty L2-intermediate, 10 L2-advanced, and 10 Heritage-advanced Spanish speakers
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An fMRI validation study of the word-monitoring task as a measure of implicit knowledge: Exploring the role of explicit and implicit aptitudes in behavioral and neural processing Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-03-28 Yuichi Suzuki, Hyeonjeong Jeong, Haining Cui, Kiyo Okamoto, Ryuta Kawashima, Motoaki Sugiura
In this study, neural representation of adult second language (L2) speakers’ implicit grammatical knowledge was investigated. Advanced L2 speakers of Japanese living in Japan, as well as L1 Japanese speakers, performed a word-monitoring task (proposed as an implicit knowledge test) in the MRI scanner. Behavioral measures were obtained from aptitude tests for explicit (language analytic ability) and
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Automated assessment of second language comprehensibility: Review, training, validation, and generalization studies Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-03-28 Kazuya Saito, Konstantinos Macmillan, Magdalena Kachlicka, Takuya Kunihara, Nobuaki Minematsu
Whereas many scholars have emphasized the relative importance of comprehensibility as an ecologically valid goal for L2 speech training, testing, and development, eliciting listeners’ judgments is time-consuming. Following calls for research on more efficient L2 speech rating methods in applied linguistics, and growing attention toward using machine learning on spontaneous unscripted speech in speech
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Linguistic dissimilarity increases age-related decline in adult language learning Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-03-18 Job J. Schepens, Roeland W. N. M. van Hout, Frans W. P. van der Slik
We investigated age-related decline in adult learning of Dutch as an additional language (Ln) in speaking, writing, listening, and reading proficiency test scores for 56,024 adult immigrants with 50 L1s who came to the Netherlands for study or work. Performance for all four language skills turned out to decline monotonically after an age of arrival of about 25 years, similar to developmental trajectories
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Variability in native and nonnative language: An ERP study of semantic and grammar processing Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-03-11 Sarah Grey
This study examined individual-level variability in N400 and P600 ERP correlates of native and nonnative language sentence processing of semantic and grammar information. Twenty-six native English-speaking learners of Spanish as a second language were tested. Participants completed sentence reading tasks in English and Spanish during EEG recording. The group-level results for grammar showed P600s in
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The multidimensionality of second language oral fluency: Interfacing cognitive fluency and utterance fluency Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-03-08 Shungo Suzuki, Judit Kormos
The current study examined the extent to which cognitive fluency (CF) contributes to utterance fluency (UF) at the level of constructs. A total of 128 Japanese-speaking learners of English completed four speaking tasks—argumentative task, picture narrative task, reading-to-speaking task, and reading-while-listening-to-speaking task—and a battery of linguistic knowledge tests, capturing vocabulary size
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Text reading in English as a second language: Evidence from the Multilingual Eye-Movements Corpus Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-03-08 Victor Kuperman, Noam Siegelman, Sascha Schroeder, Cengiz Acartürk, Svetlana Alexeeva, Simona Amenta, Raymond Bertram, Rolando Bonandrini, Marc Brysbaert, Daria Chernova, Sara Maria Da Fonseca, Nicolas Dirix, Wouter Duyck, Argyro Fella, Ram Frost, Carolina A. Gattei, Areti Kalaitzi, Kaidi Lõo, Marco Marelli, Kelly Nisbet, Timothy C. Papadopoulos, Athanassios Protopapas, Satu Savo, Diego E. Shalom,
Research into second language (L2) reading is an exponentially growing field. Yet, it still has a relatively short supply of comparable, ecologically valid data from readers representing a variety of first languages (L1). This article addresses this need by presenting a new data resource called MECO L2 (Multilingual Eye Movements Corpus), a rich behavioral eye-tracking record of text reading in English
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DISCRIMINABILITY AND PROTOTYPICALITY OF NONNATIVE VOWELS Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-02-24 Yasuaki Shinohara, Chao Han, Arild Hestvik
This study examined how discriminability and prototypicality of nonnative phones modulate the amplitude of the Mismatch Negativity (MMN) event-related brain potential. We hypothesized that if a frequently occurring (standard) stimulus is not prototypical to a listener, a weaker predictive memory trace will be formed and a smaller MMN will be generated for a phonetic deviant, regardless of the discriminability
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MAPPING RESEARCH ON L2 PRONUNCIATION: A BIBLIOMETRIC ANALYSIS Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-02-22 Yusuf Demir, Galip Kartal
This study reports on a bibliometric mapping analysis of L2 pronunciation research. Analyses on 629 articles published between 1977 and 2020 in 15 prestigious SSCI-indexed applied linguistics journals identified significant research themes and trends, influential authors, documents, and publication sources. The results of the analyses of citation impact, cocitation, and research trends provide valuable
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LANGUAGE EXPERIENCE AND BILINGUAL CHILDREN’S HERITAGE LANGUAGE LEARNING Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-02-17 He Sun, Nicolette Waschl, Roodra Veera
Both language input and output are important to child language learners’ heritage language development. Nevertheless, existing studies mainly focus on language input, leaving the significance of language output underexplored. The current study assessed 201 kindergarteners’ Mandarin skills (i.e., receptive vocabulary, receptive grammar, and verbal fluency) in Singapore, and investigated the influence
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EXAMINING RATER PERCEPTION OF HOLDS AS A VISUAL CUE OF LISTENER NONUNDERSTANDING Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-02-14 Kim McDonough, Rachael Lindberg, Pavel Trofimovich
This study examined whether university students perceive holds (i.e., a listener’s temporary cessation of dynamic movement) as a visual cue of nonunderstanding. Conversations between English second language (L2) university students were sampled to extract episodes of other-initiated repair through open clarification requests (e.g., what?, sorry?). Brief, silent video clips were presented to 60 raters
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CONCEPTUALIZING L2 VOCABULARY KNOWLEDGE: AN EMPIRICAL EXAMINATION OF THE DIMENSIONALITY OF WORD KNOWLEDGE Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-02-09 Beatriz González-Fernández
The multidimensional conceptualization of vocabulary knowledge has been extraordinarily influential in lexical research. Yet, the few studies that have empirically explored the structure of word knowledge conflict regarding its multidimensionality. The present study examines the nature of L2 vocabulary knowledge by exploring how the hypothesized word-knowledge dimensions fit together across different
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EXPLORING AN ELICITED IMITATION TASK AS A MEASURE OF HERITAGE LANGUAGE PROFICIENCY Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-02-08 Megan Solon, Hae In Park, Marzieh Dehghan-Chaleshtori, Carly Carver, Avizia Y. Long
This study examines a 30-item Spanish elicited imitation task (EIT) as a measure of global language proficiency for heritage language (HL) learners of Spanish. Results from Rasch modeling suggest that, while EIT scores demonstrated excellent reliability, the ability of much of the HL sample far exceeded the difficulty of the items. Differential item functioning analysis revealed that several items
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LEARNING ENGLISH IN TODAY’S GLOBAL WORLD: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF AT HOME, ANGLOPHONE, AND LINGUA FRANCA STUDY ABROAD Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-02-08 Zeynep Köylü, Nicole Tracy-Ventura
In comparative studies focusing on context of learning, the main contexts under investigation have been study abroad (SA), at-home formal instruction (AH), and domestic immersion (IM). With the global status of English and its burgeoning popularity as a medium of instruction in countries where English only holds the status of a lingua franca, a new SA context has emerged. This study compares the L2
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EXPLORATORY STRUCTURAL EQUATION MODELING IN SECOND LANGUAGE RESEARCH: AN APPLIED EXAMPLE USING THE DUALISTIC MODEL OF PASSION Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-01-31 Abdullah Alamer, Herbert Marsh
This study offers methodological synergy in the examination of factorial structure in second language (L2) research. It illustrates the effectiveness and flexibility of the recently developed exploratory structural equation modeling (ESEM) method, which integrates the advantages of exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) into one complete measurement model. Two sets
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PROSODIC PATTERNS IN SYLHETI-ENGLISH BILINGUALS – ADDENDUM Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2022-01-24 Kathleen M. McCarthy,Esther de Leeuw
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THE LEMMA DILEMMA Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2021-12-17 Stuart Webb
Recently there has been some debate about the appropriacy of different lexical units in pedagogy and research (e.g., Brown et al., 2020; Dang & Webb, 2016a; Kremmel, 2016; Laufer & Cobb, 2020; McLean, 2018; Nation, 2016; Nation & Webb, 2011; Vilkaitė-Lozdienė & Schmitt, 2020). The lexical unit (word types, lemmas, flemmas, word families) needs to be considered when developing wordlists, vocabulary
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EXPLORING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SECOND LANGUAGE LEARNING MOTIVATION AND PROFICIENCY: A LATENT PROFILING APPROACH Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2021-12-16 Karen Dunn, Janina Iwaniec
A foundation of second language motivational theory has been that motivation contributes to explaining variance in language learning proficiency; however, empirical findings have been mixed. This article presents an innovative approach to exploring L2 proficiency and motivations of teenage English language learners in Madrid, Spain (N = 1773). Participants completed a multiskill English language test
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ARE REPLICATION STUDIES INFREQUENT BECAUSE OF NEGATIVE ATTITUDES?: INSIGHTS FROM A SURVEY OF ATTITUDES AND PRACTICES IN SECOND LANGUAGE RESEARCH Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2021-12-07 Kevin McManus
Replication is a research methodology designed to verify, consolidate, and generalize knowledge and understanding within empirical fields of study. In second language studies, however, reviews share widespread concern about the infrequency of replication. A common but speculative explanation for this situation is that replication studies are not valued because they lack originality and/or innovation
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DOUBLE-NUMBER MARKING MATTERS FOR BOTH L1 AND L2 PROCESSING OF NONLOCAL AGREEMENT SIMILARLY: AN ERP INVESTIGATION Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2021-12-07 Yesi Cheng, Ian Cunnings, David Miller, Jason Rothman
The present study uses event-related potentials (ERPs) to examine nonlocal agreement processing between native (L1) English speakers and Chinese–English second language (L2) learners, whose L1 lacks number agreement. We manipulated number marking with determiners (the vs. that/these) to see how determiner-specification influences both native and nonnative processing downstream for verbal number agreement
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SOMETIMES LESS IS MORE: THE EFFECTS OF PHONETICALLY VARIABLE INPUT ON AUDITORY PROCESSING INSTRUCTION FOR L2 FRENCH Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2021-12-07 Kiwako Ito, Wynne Wong
Effects of phonetically variable input (PVI) for processing instruction (PI) training and the number of training items were tested with a picture-selection eye-tracking task. Intermediate second language (L2) learners of French (n = 174) were tested before and after they received either a short (24 items), medium (48), or long (96) training on the causative structure with either single- or multivoice
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THE COMING PARADIGM SHIFT IN THE USE OF LEXICAL UNITS Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Dale Brown,Jeffrey Stewart,Tim Stoeckel,Stuart McLean
For any L2 research project or pedagogical purpose, determining what counts as a single lexical unit is a crucial issue. We would therefore like to thank SSLA for instigating this discussion of the issue, and Stuart Webb for his thoughts on this matter. Although proper perspective must always be maintained, we believe that in thinking about lexical units something of a paradigm shift (Kuhn, 1962) is