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Journal ArticleDOI

Internal and external interfaces in bilingual language development: Beyond structural overlap

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TLDR
The authors explored four variables that contribute to this vulnerability to different extents depending on the nature of the interface: underspecification, cross-linguistic influence, quantity and quality of the input, and processing limitations.
Abstract
This article deals with the interface between syntax and discoursepragmatics/semantics in bilingual speakers. Linguistic phenomena at the interface have been shown to be especially vulnerable in both child and adult bilinguals; here we explore four variables that contribute to this vulnerability to different extents depending on the nature of the interface: underspecification, cross-linguistic influence, quantity and quality of the input, and processing limitations. We investigate the role played by the aforementioned variables in two recently completed studies. One compares the performance of English– Italian and Spanish–Italian bilingual children, monolingual English- and Italian-speaking children and adults on forced-choice grammaticality tasks on the distribution of overt and null subject pronouns in Italian and in English. The second explores bilingual and monolingual speakers’ sensitivity to the presence of definite articles in specific and generic plural noun phrases in Italian and in English. We show that over and above structural overlap, other factors must be included to account for differences in the behavioural data in the two tasks and in different populations of bilinguals and monolinguals. We argue that processing factors play a non-trivial role in the difficulty encountered by bilinguals in coordinating syntax with contextual discourse-pragmatic information, regardless of the absence or presence of partial structural overlap. In the case of the internal coordination between syntax and semantics, processing factors may be less likely to affect bilinguals’ performance, while the extent of structural overlap and the associated internal formal features seem to play a more important role.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Pinning down the concept of “interface” in bilingualism

TL;DR: This paper selectively reviews the research on the Interface Hypothesis, addressing some common misinterpretations and outlining the most recent interdisciplinary developments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Heritage languages and their speakers: Opportunities and challenges for linguistics

TL;DR: The authors examine several important grammatical phenomena from the standpoint of their representation in heritage languages, including case, aspect, and other interface phenomena, and discuss how the questions raised by data from heritage speakers could fruitfully shed light on cur- rent debates about how language works and how it is acquired under different conditions.
Book

Heritage Languages and their Speakers

TL;DR: This book provides a pioneering introduction to heritage languages and their speakers, written by one of the founders of this new field, and offers analysis of resilient and vulnerable domains in heritage languages, with a special emphasis on recurrent structural properties that occur across multiple heritage languages.
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding heritage languages

TL;DR: The authors identify three outcomes of deviation in the heritage grammar: avoidance of ambiguity, a resistance to irregularity, and a shrinking of structure, and highlight two key triggers for deviation from the relevant baseline: the quantity and quality of the input from which the heritage language is acquired, and the economy of online resources when operating in a less dominant language.
Journal ArticleDOI

Second language acquisition at the interfaces

TL;DR: An overview of L2 research on interfaces is provided, comparing different interface domains and concluding that the authors must be wary of assuming that all linguistic interfaces are equally problematic or unproblematic or that different linguistic phenomena pertaining to the same interface will necessarily behave alike.
References
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Book

The Minimalist Program

Noam Chomsky
TL;DR: This twentieth-anniversary edition reissues Noam Chomsky's classic work The Minimalist Program with a new preface by the author, which emphasizes that the minimalist approach developed in the book and in subsequent work "is a program, not a theory."
Journal ArticleDOI

Mental Control of the Bilingual Lexico-Semantic System.

TL;DR: The IC model is used to expand the explanation of the effect of category blocking in translation proposed by Kroll and Stewart (1994), and predictions of the model are tested against other data.
MonographDOI

Foundations of Language

Book

Foundations of Language: Brain, Meaning, Grammar, Evolution

TL;DR: Foundations of Language as discussed by the authors is a broad survey of linguistics, introducing a new holistic theory of the relation between the sounds, structure, and meaning of language and their relation to the mind and the brain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Foundations of language

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