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Journal ArticleDOI

Timed and Untimed Grammaticality Judgments Measure Distinct Types of Knowledge: Evidence from Eye-Movement Patterns.

TLDR
The authors used eye-tracking to compare the results of timed and untimed grammaticality judgment tests in R. Ellis (2005) and non-native English speakers with and without time pressure, and found that time pressure suppressed regressions in nonnative speakers only.
Abstract
Grammaticality judgment tests (GJTs) have been used to elicit data reflecting second language (L2) speakers’ knowledge of L2 grammar. However, the exact constructs measured by GJTs, whether primarily implicit or explicit knowledge, are disputed and have been argued to differ depending on test-related variables (i.e., time pressure and item grammaticality).Using eye-tracking, this study replicates the GJT results in R. Ellis (2005). Twenty native and 40 nonnative English speakers judged sentences with and without time pressure. Analyses revealed that time pressure suppressed regressions (right-to-left eye movements) in nonnative speakers only. Conversely, both groups regressed more on untimed, grammatical items. These findings suggest that timed and untimed GJTs measure different constructs, which could correspond to implicit and explicit knowledge, respectively. In particular, they point to a difference in the levels of automatic and controlled processing involved in responding to the timed and untimed tests. Furthermore, untimed grammatical items may induce GJT-specific task effects.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Incidental vocabulary learning in a natural reading context: an eye-tracking study

TL;DR: This article used eye tracking to explore how the processing of unfamiliar words changes with repeated exposure and how the repeated exposure, processing and processing affect word learning, and found that the number of exposures was the strongest predictor of vocabulary learning.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Interface of Explicit and Implicit Knowledge in a Second Language: Insights From Individual Differences in Cognitive Aptitudes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors found that aptitude for explicit learning significantly predicted acquisition of explicit knowledge, and automatized explicit knowledge significantly predicted the acquisition of implicit knowledge in a naturalistic second language (L2) acquisition context.
Book

Third Language Acquisition and Linguistic Transfer

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors systematically walk the reader through the evidence to answer these questions and suggest that acquiring an additional language in bilinguals (of all types) is unique and reveals things about the links between language and mind, brain, and cognition, which are otherwise impossible to appreciate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Validity of new measures of implicit knowledge: Distinguishing implicit knowledge from automatized explicit knowledge

TL;DR: In this paper, a battery of six grammar tests was designed to distinguish automatized explicit knowledge and implicit knowledge, and three real-time comprehension tasks (a visual-world task, a wordmonitoring task, and a self-paced reading task) were hypothesized to measure implicit knowledge.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Uses of Eye-Tracking Data in Second Language Sentence Processing Research

TL;DR: The authors reviewed the use of eye tracking to study L2 spoken-language comprehension and highlighted the importance of using multiple measures of online sentence processing by discussing results obtained using a moving window task and eye-tracking records while L2 speakers read syntactically ambiguous relative clauses.
BookDOI

The generative study of second language acquisition

TL;DR: The authors The Strong Continuity Hypothesis: Some Evidence Concerning Functional Categories in Adult L2 Acquisition: Homegrown or Imported? Commentary on Part I. Part II:Constraints on Wh-Movement.
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What is the scanpath signature of syntactic reanalysis

TL;DR: For instance, Meseguer et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed a method that quantifies scanpath similarity to reveal several distinct fixation strategies associated with syntactic reanalysis that went undetected in a previously published data set, which suggests that the human parsing system non-deterministically adopts different strategies when confronted with the disambiguating material in gardenpath sentences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Morphological Congruency and the Acquisition of L2 Morphemes

TL;DR: This paper examined the morphological congruency hypothesis and found that the presence of a similar morpheme in the learner's first and second languages (L2) facilitates morphological development.