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Journal ArticleDOI

Processing Tense/Aspect-Agreement Violations On-Line in the Second Language: A Self-Paced Reading Study with French and German L2 Learners of English.

06 Nov 2013-Second Language Research (SAGE Publications)-Vol. 29, Iss: 4, pp 413-439
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report the results of a self-paced reading experiment designed to investigate the question of whether or not advanced French and German learners of English as a second language (EASL) can read in a selfpaced manner.
Abstract: In this article, we report the results of a self-paced reading experiment designed to investigate the question of whether or not advanced French and German learners of English as a second language ...

Summary (5 min read)

Introduction

  • This is a repository copy of Processing tense/aspect-agreement violations on-line in the second language : a self-paced reading study with French and German L2 learners of English.
  • The publisher or other rights holders may allow further reproduction and re-use of the full text version.

Keywords

  • Aspect, syntactic processing, tense, transfer Corresponding author: Leah Roberts, Centre for Language Learning Research, Department of Education, University of York, Heslington, York YO10 5DD, UK.
  • From earlier research, in particular data from corpus studies and acceptability judgment tasks, the authors know much about learners’ production of tense/aspect distinctions and of tense/aspect morphology in development both at early and more advanced stages of L2 acquisition, and more recently about how L2 learners interpret target language tense/aspect distinctions in general.
  • Initially, the cat ate/*has eaten only fish.
  • Both French and German have a compound past (the passé composé/the Perfekt)1 which is similar in surface form to the present perfect in English (have + past participle).
  • Before reporting the details of the current experiment and the results, the authors consider what is meant by implicit and explicit knowledge.

1 Implicit and explicit knowledge

  • The distinction between and knowledge refers to whether or not that knowledge is intuitive and available for automatic processing , or consciously available through effortful, controlled processing (e.g. R. Ellis et al., 2006; Hulstijn, 2005).
  • According to Tokowicz and MacWhinney (2005: 178) types of explicit knowledge include similarities between the L1–L2 pairings, and explicit grammar rules, which can be exploited by L2 learners when making linguistic judgements.
  • As such, experimental tasks such as off-line grammaticality judgment tasks (GJTs) are typically considered conducive to testing and measuring this type of knowledge (e.g. R. Ellis, 2005; Tokowicz and MacWhinney, 2005).
  • On the other hand, as learners cannot consciously tap into their implicit knowledge, on-line tasks such as real-time spontaneous oral production tasks (e.g. R. Ellis, 2005) and event-related potential (ERP) responses in sentence comprehension tasks (e.g. Tokowicz and MacWhinney, 2005) are considered appropriate for measuring implicit knowledge (e.g. R. Ellis, 2005).
  • The authors test explicit knowledge using an untimed GJT and implicit knowledge using a self-paced reading task in an attempt to give a better understanding of how learners use their knowledge in on-and off-line comprehension.

2 Temporal adverbs and temporal verbal morphology

  • Languages differ in how these temporal relations are established, ranging from languages with mandatory marking of tense and aspect, to those with no such marking but a full repertoire of temporal adverbials.
  • French also marks aspect, albeit differently to English.
  • (‘Maria slept’) perfective b. French: Maria a dormi.
  • French, on the other hand, has one form underlying the two meanings: the compound past encodes T[+past] for preterit meaning and T[–past] and Asp[+perfect] for present perfect meaning.

3 Acquisition of tense/aspect in the L2

  • The L2 acquisition of tense/aspect has been investigated from both functional and formal perspectives.
  • Researchers working within the functional tradition have been interested in how learners establish temporal relations rather than in their ability to acquire the formal morphological marking of tense/aspect (e.g. Dietrich et al., 1995; Giacalone Ramat, 1992; Klein and Perdue, 1992; Skiba and Dittmar, 1992; Starren, 2001).
  • In turn, this contributes to the discussion on how much, if any, the L1 influences the acquisition of abstract underlying grammatical properties at the level of parametric variation between the L1 and L2.
  • Turning to the present perfect, Liszka (2004, 2005) tested L1 Chinese, German and Japanese speakers of advanced L2 English on the acquisition of the English present perfect, using a form-interpretation task.
  • The Japanese alternated mainly between past simple use (55%) and present use (38%), with the remaining 7% made up of other forms.

4 Comprehending temporal relations on-line

  • One way to investigate learners’ implicit grammatical knowledge is to use methods that can tap into comprehenders’ moment-by-moment processing of sentences, while they are reading the input for comprehension (for an overview of L2 processing, see Roberts, 2012).
  • Last week, James went/*has gone swimming every day.
  • Of interest to the current experiment with L2 learners is how the processor handles mismatches between a fronted temporal adverb and a morphological marker of tense/aspect, and there are very few studies that have focused on the consequences of processing temporal or tense/aspect violations on-line.
  • Afgelopen zondag lakte Vincent de kozijnen van zijn landhuis.
  • Last Sunday Vincent painted the window frames of his country house.

II The current study

  • In the current study the authors investigate the knowledge of the English past simple and present perfect by advanced French and German L2 learners; specifically, they ask whether the learners are able to access and apply this knowledge in the on-line processing of English sentences with tense–aspect violations.
  • The underlying assumption is that if the learners have fully acquired the semantics underlying the morphological marking of tense and aspect, then they should be sensitive to the mismatch between a fronted temporal adverbial and the tensed clause that follows in both off- and on-line comprehension.

1 Participants

  • The learners were asked to read 10 sets of 6 sentences in which the verb was missing, and then to choose the correct verb from a set of infinitival forms, inserting it in its correct morphological form .
  • Twenty French and 20 German L2 learners who all scored above 60% on the task were selected.
  • The accuracy for both groups was above chance.
  • All of the French learners and the majority of the German learners were studying English at university in their home country.

2 Materials

  • Twenty-four past simple (11) and 24 present perfect (12) experimental items were created .7.
  • The first was the critical sentence and it contained a temporal adverbial (a prepositional phrase or adverbial expression) in the topic position, thus modifying the time being talked about (the Topic Time, TT; see Klein, 1994).
  • Last week, James went swimming every day.
  • Mismatch b. * Since last week, James went swimming every day, also known as Past simple.

3 Tasks and procedure

  • For the main experiment, two tasks were undertaken: an off-line acceptability judgment task measuring explicit knowledge and a self-paced reading experiment to tap into implicit knowledge.
  • Each session began with a cross in the centre of the screen.
  • All of the experimental items and half of the fillers were followed by a yes/no comprehension question, requiring equal numbers of ‘yes’ and ‘no’ responses (e.g.
  • The L2 learners were also required to complete the cloze production task and the English proficiency test (The Oxford Placement Test; Allan, 1992).
  • This feedback was provided at least three weeks after the participants had fully completed the study.

4 Results

  • For all analyses, an ANOVA was run on the data, with the within-participants factor Type (match/mismatch) and the between-participants factor Group with 3 levels (native English speakers/German L2 learners/French L2 learners).
  • This factor was treated as a within-participants factor in the items analyses.
  • The authors report the results below separately for each because the critical regions differ by one word between the past simple and the present perfect, as the latter comprises an auxiliary plus past participle.

5 Acceptability judgment task

  • Table 1 shows the three groups’ mean responses on the acceptability judgment task for the past simple items.
  • Post-hoc Tukey HSD test found no significant differences between the groups (ps > .07).

6 Self-paced reading task

  • Before analyses were run on the reading time data, to remove outlying data points, responses that fell 2 standard deviations away from an individual’s mean were removed per segment that was analysed, affecting 1.22% of the English, 0.92% of the French and 1.23% of the German data.
  • There were no other significant effects following this segment.9.
  • As with the past simple items, analyses were run on the segments from the VP (here starting with the auxiliary verb) and then across the three segments following it, the past participle and the two subsequent words.
  • Table 4 shows the mean reading times for these conditions, and the processing cost effects are visualized in Figure 2.

IV General discussion

  • The authors presented the results from an off-line acceptability judgment task and an on-line self-paced reading study designed to investigate the explicit and implicit knowledge of English tense/aspect violations of German and French L2 learners.
  • The main results are summarized as follows: .
  • Thus they all demonstrated their explicit knowledge of the English past simple and present perfect.
  • At University of York on November 11, 2013slr.sagepub.comDownloaded from Roberts and Liszka 427 Despite this, the two L2 groups patterned differently from each other in their online processing of the experimental sentences.
  • The French L2 learners’ process- ing reflected their off-line, metalinguistic judgments: they found the mismatch conditions more difficult to process than the match conditions of both the past simple and the present perfect items.

1 L1 influences

  • The major finding of the current study was that the French but not the German L2 learners were sensitive during on-line processing to the mismatch between the fronted temporal adverbial and the inflected verb.
  • If indeed L1 influence underlies the observed on-line differences in the current study, the question then arises as to what it is that is transferred between the L1 and the L2.
  • If the learners were directly interpreting the English sentences according to their L1 grammar, this could explain the difference between the two L2 learners in their processing of the past simple items.
  • Turning now to the present perfect, for the French, as [+/−perfect] is specified unlike in German, the authors might expect the mismatch conditions to be more difficult to process than the match conditions.
  • Depuis la semaine dernière je suis malade, also known as present perfect b. French.

2 Native speakers’ processing of past simple vs. present perfect violations

  • Another striking finding of this study was the unexpected processing cost asymmetry that was observed in the native speakers’ processing of the experimental items.
  • That is, it was only the mismatch condition in the present perfect sentences that caused a processing cost for the native speakers (Last year, Jill has wanted … vs. *Since last year, Jill wanted), even though both mismatch conditions were assessed as significantly less acceptable than the corresponding match conditions in the off-line acceptability judgment task.
  • The authors suggest that it is because the present tense component in the present perfect constructions has wanted means the time that is being talked about (TT) includes the time of the utterance and, therefore, one cannot use an adverbial that singles out a specific time in the past (last year, yesterday, at five).
  • Also, the fact that this construction may be in the process of becoming more widely used in British English would explain why the French learners performed differently from the English native speakers with the past simple items: it is plausible to assume that a learner may need more and naturalistic exposure in the L2 environment to fully acquire such constructions.
  • What is of interest is that this difference was only observable in the native speakers’ on-line comprehension: when all interpretative processes are brought into play, and a metalinguistic judgment needed to be made, these items were classed as ‘unacceptable’, like the past simple items.

3 Further L2 processing research

  • Further research is necessary to address many issues that are raised in this study.
  • It is not clear what the L2 learners’ and the native speakers’ final interpretations for the mismatch conditions were, because the authors did not specifically ask the participants for their interpretations of either the match or the mismatch sentences.
  • One possibility is that because lexical means for expressing temporal relations characterize early learners’ tense/aspect productions, seemingly irrespective of the properties of the L1 (e.g. Starren, 2001), then such lexical means may ultimately exert more influence in L2 learners’ interpretations Perhaps in contrast, in monolingual processing the morphology ‘wins out’.
  • 14 at University of York on November 11, 2013slr.sagepub.comDownloaded from Roberts and Liszka 431.

V Conclusions

  • Based on the results of this study, it was argued that the learners’.
  • In addition to an effect of direct transfer, i.e. whether or not the L1 encodes Asp[+/−perfect], it was further suggested that indirect transfer also plays a role.
  • This was proposed to account for the results in terms of the differences between English and French, and similarities between French and German, complementing the direct transfer account, which considers the similarities between English and French and the differences with German.
  • It was argued that whether or not the learners’.
  • L1 has grammaticized aspect or not more generally may underlie the differences in sensitivity to tense/aspect agreement violations, rather than the effect being driven only by the L1 and the L2 making exactly the same distinctions.

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tense/aspect-agreement violations on-line in the second language : a self-paced reading
study with French and German L2 learners of English. Second Language Research. 413–
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Processing tense/aspect-agreement violations on-line in the second
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DOI: 10.1177/0267658313503171
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second
language
research
Processing tense/aspect-
agreement violations on-
line in the second language:
A self-paced reading study
with French and German L2
learners of English
Leah Roberts
University of York, UK
Sarah Ann Liszka
University of Greenwich, UK
Abstract
In this article, we report the results of a self-paced reading experiment designed to investigate
the question of whether or not advanced French and German learners of English as a second
language (L2) are sensitive to tense/aspect mismatches between a fronted temporal adverbial and
the inflected verb that follows (e.g. *Last week, James has gone swimming every day) in their on-line
comprehension. The L2 learners were equally able to distinguish correctly the past simple from
the present perfect as measured by a traditional cloze test production task. They were also both
able to assess the mismatch items as less acceptable than the match items in an off-line judgment
task. Using a self-paced reading task, we investigated whether they could access this knowledge
during real-time processing. Despite performing similarly in the explicit tasks, the two learner
groups processed the experimental items differently from each other in real time. On-line, only
the French L2 learners were sensitive to the mismatch conditions in both the past simple and the
present perfect contexts, whereas the German L2 learners did not show a processing cost at all
for either mismatch type. We suggest that the performance differences between the L2 groups
can be explained by influences from the learners’ first language (L1): namely, only those whose L1
has grammaticized aspect (French) were sensitive to the tense/aspect violations on-line, and thus
could be argued to have implicit knowledge of English tense/aspect distinctions.
Keywords
aspect, syntactic processing, tense, transfer
Corresponding author:
Leah Roberts, Centre for Language Learning Research, Department of Education, University of York,
Heslington, York YO10 5DD, UK.
Email: leah.roberts@york.ac.uk
503171SLR29410.1177/0267658313503171Second Language ResearchRoberts and Liszka
2013
Article
at University of York on November 11, 2013slr.sagepub.comDownloaded from

414 Second Language Research 29(4)
I Introduction
In the field of second language (L2) acquisition research, the acquisition of tense and
aspect has long been a topic of intensive investigation (for overviews, see for example
Bardovi-Harlig, 2000; Slabakova, 2002). This is unsurprising given that temporal
expression is fundamental to communication, yet its formal and functional marking
varies dramatically from language to language. The acquisition of tense and aspect is
therefore a core task for all language learners. From earlier research, in particular data
from corpus studies and acceptability judgment tasks, we know much about learners’
production of tense/aspect distinctions and of tense/aspect morphology in develop-
ment both at early and more advanced stages of L2 acquisition, and more recently
about how L2 learners interpret target language tense/aspect distinctions in general.
However, little is known about the nature of learners’ knowledge of the grammatical
marking of tense and aspect once it is observed off-line. In other words, it is unclear
whether the knowledge that learners display can be applied automatically in real-time
comprehension. This is a topic that can be conceptualized in terms of the debate in the
field on the nature of ‘implicit’ versus ‘explicit’ knowledge (e.g. R. Ellis, 2005), and is
an important issue because language acquisition is a complex task that requires both
the acquisition of knowledge as well as the ability to put this knowledge to use in real
time. Focusing on the latter, in this article we investigate whether French and German
L2 learners of English are sensitive to mismatches in agreement between fronted tem-
poral adverbials (e.g. Initially/Since last week) and the tense/aspect of immediately
following verbs (ate/has eaten) as shown in (1), in their on-line comprehension of the
target language.
(1) a. Initially, the cat ate/*has eaten only fish.
b. Since last week, the cat *ate/has eaten only fish.
Both French and German have a compound past (the passé composé/the Perfekt)
1
which
is similar in surface form to the present perfect in English (have + past participle).
However, both French and German contrast with English in that the English present
perfect cannot be used with an adverbial specifying definite past time (e.g. Yesterday I
have danced all night; cf. ‘the present perfect puzzle’, Klein, 1992). On the other hand,
French and English pattern together and both differently from German in that aspect is
grammaticized in the former, but not in the latter language, a difference that may impact
L2 processing (Papadopoulou et al., 2008). In the current study, we investigate the poten-
tial role of the learners’ first language in their ability to put their (explicit) knowledge of
English tense and aspect – as measured by traditional off-line production tasks – to use
in on-line comprehension.
Before reporting the details of the current experiment and the results, we consider
what is meant by implicit and explicit knowledge. We then briefly present an overview
on the cross-linguistic expression of tense/aspect, summarize findings on the study of the
acquisition of tense/aspect in the L2 with particular reference to first language (L1) influ-
ences, and present a brief review of the processing of tense/aspect in real-time
comprehension.
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Roberts and Liszka 415
1 Implicit and explicit knowledge
The distinction between implicit and explicit knowledge refers to whether or not that
knowledge is intuitive and available for automatic processing (implicit), or con-
sciously available through effortful, controlled processing (explicit) (e.g. R. Ellis et
al., 2006; Hulstijn, 2005). According to Tokowicz and MacWhinney (2005: 178)
types of explicit knowledge include similarities between the L1–L2 pairings, and
explicit grammar rules, which can be exploited by L2 learners when making linguis-
tic judgements. As such, experimental tasks such as off-line grammaticality judg-
ment tasks (GJTs) are typically considered conducive to testing and measuring this
type of knowledge (e.g. R. Ellis, 2005; Tokowicz and MacWhinney, 2005). On the
other hand, as learners cannot consciously tap into their implicit knowledge, on-line
tasks such as real-time spontaneous oral production tasks (e.g. R. Ellis, 2005) and
event-related potential (ERP) responses in sentence comprehension tasks (e.g.
Tokowicz and MacWhinney, 2005) are considered appropriate for measuring implicit
knowledge (e.g. R. Ellis, 2005). In this spirit, we test explicit knowledge using an
untimed GJT and implicit knowledge using a self-paced reading task in an attempt to
give a better understanding of how learners use their knowledge in on-and off-line
comprehension.
2 Temporal adverbs and temporal verbal morphology
According to (Klein, 1994)
2
past, present and future tense is established by the temporal
relation between the topic time (TT) and the time of the utterance (TU), and this abstract
temporal relation may or may not be grammatically marked, for instance by verbal mor-
phology. Klein distinguishes the topic time from the situation time (TSit): both are time
spans, but the former relates to the time (past, present, future) for which an assertion is
made (e.g. I had danced – past time – before TU), and the latter, which is associated with
the non-finite part of the utterance, refers to the time span at which the situation occurs.
Aspect in this system is established by the relationship between the topic time and the
situation time, creating temporal relations such as BEFORE, AFTER, (partly)
SIMULTANEOUS (in ‘I had danced’, the TT is AFTER the time of the situation (TSit)
dance).
Lexical devices such as temporal adverbs can also mark such temporal relations.
Temporal adverbs can specify the internal and the external properties of a time span, and
also, as shown in (2) below they can modify either the TT (yesterday) or the TSit (all
night), depending on their position in a sentence.
(2) Yesterday, I slept all night.
Languages differ in how these temporal relations are established, ranging from languages
with mandatory marking of tense and aspect, to those with no such marking but a full
repertoire of temporal adverbials. For instance, and relevant to the current study, in
German, French, and English, tense is mandatorily marked grammatically. For example,
(3a–c) below demonstrate the present simple in English, French and German. In terms of
preterit meaning in English it is realized by the past simple (3d). French also has a past
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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is argued that the specific context for each item in this experiment provided a trigger for agreement checking with temporal information encoded on the verb, i.e., morphological aspect marking, which is consistent with participants’ post hoc grammaticality judgements of the same sentences, which overall show a high acceptability of aspect mismatch sentences.
Abstract: We investigated whether brain potentials of grammatical aspect processing resemble semantic or morpho-syntactic processing, or whether they instead are characterized by an entirely distinct pattern in the same individuals. We studied aspect from the perspective of agreement between the temporal information in the context (temporal adverbials, e.g., Right now) and a morpho-syntactic marker of grammatical aspect (e.g., progressive is swimming). Participants read questions providing a temporal context that was progressive (What is Sophie doing in the pool right now?) or habitual (What does Sophie do in the pool every Monday?). Following a lead-in sentence context such as Right now, Sophie…, we measured ERPs time-locked to verb phrases in four different conditions, e.g., (a) is swimming (control); (b) *is cooking (semantic violation); (c) *are swimming (morpho-syntactic violation); or (d)?swims (aspect mismatch); …in the pool”. The collected ERPs show typical N400 and P600 effects for semantics and morpho-syntax, while aspect processing elicited an Early Negativity (250-350 ms). The aspect-related Negativity was short-lived and had a central scalp distribution with an anterior onset. This differentiates it not only from the semantic N400 effect, but also from the typical (L)AN (Left Anterior Negativity), that is frequently reported for various types of agreement processing. Moreover, aspect processing was not accompanied by a clear P600 modulation. We argue that the specific context for each item in this experiment provided a trigger for agreement checking with temporal information encoded on the verb, i.e., morphological aspect marking. The aspect-related Negativity obtained for aspect agreement mismatches reflects a violated expectation concerning verbal inflection (in the example above, the expected verb phrase was Sophie is X-ing rather than Sophie X-s in condition d)). The absence of an additional P600 for aspect processing suggests that the mismatch did not require additional reintegration or processing costs. This is consistent with participants’ posthoc grammaticality judgements of the same sentences, which overall show a high acceptability of aspect mismatch sentences.

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  • ...…of grammatical aspect is a common pattern (see, e.g., Bardovi-Harlig, 2000; Salaberry and Shirai, 2002; Montrul and Slabakova, 2003; Flecken, 2011; Roberts and Liszka, 2013) because of the difficulty in learning to use the forms appropriately given their strong dependence on context (e.g., I am…...

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  • ...…Duff & Li 2002; Gabriele 2008, 2009; Gabriele, Martohardjono & McClure 2005; Gujord 2013; Izquierdo & Collins 2008; Montrul & Slabakova 2002a and 2002b; 2003; McManus 2015; Roberts & Liszka 2013; Salaberry 2008, 2017; Slabakova 2008; Slabakova & Montrul 2002a and 2002b, 2003; among many others4)....

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Abstract: The purpose of this study was to determine whether processability theory (PT; Pienemann, 1998, 2005) accounts for the emergence of grammatical forms and structures in comprehension. Sixty-one learners of English participated in oral interviews that elicited a variety of structures relevant to PT. Learners were divided into two groups: those who produced these structures productively in speech (high level) and those who did not (low level). These groups then read grammatical and ungrammatical sentences with PT structures in a self-paced reading task. Based on Pienemann (1998), PT predicts that the high-level group should perform similarly to native speakers. However, only the native speaker control group demonstrated sensitivity to ungrammaticalities. There was evidence that learners might have acquired lower-stage structures in an implicational order in comprehension, but it was quite mixed. These results have implications for PT and for models of the L2 linguistic system that include both production and comprehension.

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  • ...…or listening in combination with other methods to get a clearer picture of learners’ knowledge and abilities (e.g., Marinis, Roberts, Felser, & Clahsen, 2005; Roberts & Liszka, 2013), the comparison often focuses on online versus off-line performance rather than production versus reception per se....

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Abstract: The L2 acquisition of English articles and tense-aspect (TA) have been popular research areas over the last two decades. Compared with the numerous applications of metalinguistic knowledge and oral production tasks, the use of online (real time) processing methods to investigate these morphosyntactic structures has been far less common. In perhaps the only eye-tracking study on L2 English article processing, Trenkic et al. (2014) showed that L1 Mandarin/L2 English learners are able to use articles in real time to resolve referent ambiguity in a similar manner to L1 English speakers. In one of the rare self-paced reading (SPR) studies on L2 English TA processing, Roberts and Liszka (2013) found that while L1 English and L1 French/L2 English speakers were sensitive to English present perfect violations, L1 German/L2 English speakers, whose first language grammaticalises tense but not aspect, were not. However, beyond these important findings, our understanding of the L2 online processing of these morphosyntactic structures remains limited. To address these gaps, the present thesis tested 24 L1 Mandarin/L2 English, 22 L1 Croatian/L2 English and 24 L1 English participants on an SPR task and in oral production. The SPR task used novel article stimuli and TA items adapted from Roberts and Liszka (2013) to test (implicit) sensitivity to violations, while a grammaticality judgement task (GJT) on the same stimuli was used to ascertain participants’ explicit knowledge. The comprehension data were triangulated with oral productions of English articles and tense elicited via an animated film retelling task. A linear mixed-effects model analysis revealed that the participants’ performance on both the SPR and oral production tasks was highly influenced by their L1. The findings lend support to the morphological congruency hypothesis (Jiang, Novokshanova, Masuda, & Wang, 2011) which posits that late L2 learners cannot fully acquire morphosyntactic features that are incongruent (realised differently or absent in the L1 and L2), which suggest several implications for further research.

7 citations


Cites background or methods or result from "Processing Tense/Aspect-Agreement V..."

  • ...Along with the 48 article items and 24 tense/aspect items, additional 24 filler items were adopted from Roberts and Liszka (2013)....

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  • ...…the morphosyntactic structures investigated in the present study, previous research has demonstrated that language congruency seems to matter in the acquisition of English articles (Crosthwaite, 2014), as well as the acquisition of English TA system (Hawkins & Liszka, 2003; Roberts & Liszka, 2013)....

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  • ...Similarly, Roberts and Liszka (2013) used SPR to investigate L2 online comprehension of the English past simple and present perfect with L1 French and L1 German learners of English (and a control group of L1 English speakers)....

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  • ...The same number of participants per group (24) were tested as in Roberts and Liszka (2013), however, in the present study the participants saw one more condition than in the original study....

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  • ...While Study 1 was novel in design, Study 2 aimed to replicate the study by Roberts and Liszka (2013) but expanded upon the original design by including stimuli testing sensitivity to present simple violations along with past simple and present perfect....

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References
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Book
01 Jan 1947

1,950 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article is a defence of the Full Transfer/Full Access (FT/FA) model, arguing that the FT/FA model provides the most coherent picture of the L2 initial cognitive state.
Abstract: This article is a defence of the Full Transfer/Full Access (FT/FA) model. FT/FA hypothesizes that the initial state of L2 acquisition is the final state of L1 acquisition (Full Transfer) and that failure to assign a representation to input data will force subsequent restructurings, drawing from options of UG (Full Access). We illustrate the FT/FA model by reviewing our analysis of the developmental Turkish-German Interlanguage data of Schwartz and Sprouse (1994) and then turn to other data that similarly receive straightforward accounts under FT/FA.We also consider two other competing hypotheses, both of which accept Full Access but not Full Transfer: the Minimal Trees hypothesis (no transfer of functional categories) of Vainikka and Young-Scholten (1994; 1996) and the Weak Transfer hypothesis (no transfer of the values associated with functional categories) of Eubank (1993/94). We provide an example of (extremely robust) L2 acquisition data that highlight the inadequacy of the Minimal Trees hypothesis in...

1,464 citations


"Processing Tense/Aspect-Agreement V..." refers background in this paper

  • ...…to inform debates on whether Universal Grammar is fully available to older L2 learners (e.g. Lardiere, 1998a, 1998b, 2000; Prévost and White, 2000; Schwartz and Sprouse, 1996; Vainikka and Young-Scholten, 1996a) or whether it is only partially available (e.g. Hawkins and Chan, 1997; Hawkins and…...

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  • ...Such selective differences help to inform debates on whether Universal Grammar is fully available to older L2 learners (e.g. Lardiere, 1998a, 1998b, 2000; Prévost and White, 2000; Schwartz and Sprouse, 1996; Vainikka and Young-Scholten, 1996a) or whether it is only partially available (e....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article reported on a new study of the effects of implicit and explicit corrective feedback on the acquisition of past tense -ed, which was measured by means of an oral imitation test (designed to measure implicit knowledge) and both an untimed grammaticality judgment test and a metalinguistic knowledge test (both designed to measure explicit knowledge).
Abstract: This article reviews previous studies of the effects of implicit and explicit corrective feedback on SLA, pointing out a number of methodological problems. It then reports on a new study of the effects of these two types of corrective feedback on the acquisition of past tense -ed. In an experimental design (two experimental groups and a control group), low-intermediate learners of second language English completed two communicative tasks during which they received either recasts (implicit feedback) or metalinguistic explanation (explicit feedback) in response to any utterance that contained an error in the target structure. Acquisition was measured by means of an oral imitation test (designed to measure implicit knowledge) and both an untimed grammaticality judgment test and a metalinguistic knowledge test (both designed to measure explicit knowledge). The tests were administered prior to the instruction, 1 day after the instruction, and again 2 weeks later. Statistical comparisons of the learners' performance on the posttests showed a clear advantage for explicit feedback over implicit feedback for both the delayed imitation and grammaticality judgment posttests. Thus, the results indicate that metalinguistic explanation benefited implicit as well as explicit knowledge and point to the importance of including measures of both types of knowledge in experimental studies.This research was funded by a Marsden Fund grant awarded by the Royal Society of Arts of New Zealand. Researchers other than the authors who contributed to the research were Jenefer Philip, Satomi Mizutami, Keiko Sakui, and Thomas Delaney. Thanks go to the editors of this special issue and to two anonymous SSLA reviewers of a draft of the article for their constructive comments.

920 citations


"Processing Tense/Aspect-Agreement V..." refers background in this paper

  • ...The distinction between implicit and explicit knowledge refers to whether or not that knowledge is intuitive and available for automatic processing (implicit), or consciously available through effortful, controlled processing (explicit) (e.g. R. Ellis et al., 2006; Hulstijn, 2005)....

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Book
01 Jan 1983
TL;DR: In this paper, a comprehensive analysis of sentence-level anaphora is presented, with a focus on the relations between the structural properties of sentences and their semantic interpretation within the hypotheses of the autonomy of syntax and of interpretative semantics.
Abstract: First published in 1983, this book examines anaphora — a central issue in linguistic theory as it lies at the crossroads of several major problems. On the one hand it is believed that the same conditions that govern the interpretation of anaphora also govern syntactic movement rules but on the other, while anaphora is known to interact with various discourse and semantic considerations, it also provides a clear instance of the dependency of the semantic interpretation of sentences upon semantic properties of natural language. This book has two major goals: the first is a comprehensive analysis of sentence-level anaphora that addresses the questions posed above, and the second is an examination of the broader issues of the relations between the structural properties of sentences and their semantic interpretation within the hypotheses of the autonomy of syntax and of interpretative semantics shown by Chomsky.

915 citations


"Processing Tense/Aspect-Agreement V..." refers result in this paper

  • ...These findings fit with the view that the fronted temporal adverbial functions as a topic (Chafe, 1984; Partee, 1984; Reinhart, 1983; Virtanen, 1992) and, as such, creates a new discourse segment.4 (8) a....

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Book
01 Jan 1994
TL;DR: This book looks at the various ways in which time is reflected in natural language - the verbal categories of tense and aspect; inherent lexical features of the verb; and various types of temporal adverbs.
Abstract: This book looks at the various ways in which time is reflected in natural language. All natural languages have developed a rich repetoire of devices to express time, but linguists have tended to concentrate on tense and aspect, rather than discourse principles. Klein considers the four main ways in which language expresses time - the verbal categories of tense and aspect; inherent lexical features of the verb; and various types of temporal adverbs. Klein looks at the interaction of these four devices and suggests new or partly new treatments of these devices to express temporality.

859 citations

Frequently Asked Questions (2)
Q1. What are the contributions in this paper?

In this article, the authors report the results of a self-paced reading experiment designed to investigate the question of whether or not advanced French and German learners of English as a second language ( L2 ) are sensitive to tense/aspect mismatches between a fronted temporal adverbial and the inflected verb that follows ( e. g. * Last week, James has gone swimming every day ) in their on-line comprehension. Using a self-paced reading task, the authors investigated whether they could access this knowledge during real-time processing. The authors suggest that the performance differences between the L2 groups can be explained by influences from the learners ’ first language ( L1 ): namely, only those whose L1 has grammaticized aspect ( French ) were sensitive to the tense/aspect violations on-line, and thus could be argued to have implicit knowledge of English tense/aspect distinctions. 

Further research is necessary to address many issues that are raised in this study. One possibility is that because lexical means for expressing temporal relations characterize early learners ’ tense/aspect productions, seemingly irrespective of the properties of the L1 ( e. g. Starren, 2001 ), then such lexical means may ultimately exert more influence in L2 learners ’ interpretations The authors leave these open questions to future research. This may be so even when the inflectional morphology appears to be in place, and can be used in real-time processing.