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Effects of Form-Focused Practice and Feedback: A Multisite Replication Study of Yang and Lyster (2010) Lang. Learn. (IF 5.24) Pub Date : 2023-11-29 Nadia Mifka-Profozic, Jennifer Behney, Susan M. Gass, Marijana Macis, Gaia Chiuchiù, Giulia Bovolenta
We conducted a multisite replication of Yang and Lyster's (2010) study investigating the effects of recasts and prompts on learning English regular and irregular past tense. Our study was conducted with intact high school and vocational school classes in Italy and Bosnia. Our participants were young adolescents (14–15 and 16–17 years old), a population that has been largely ignored in second language
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Unknown Vocabulary Density and Reading Comprehension: Replicating Hu and Nation (2000) Lang. Learn. (IF 5.24) Pub Date : 2023-11-27 Benjamin Kremmel, Bimali Indrarathne, Judit Kormos, Shungo Suzuki
Hu and Nation's (2000) study, which stipulated that second language (L2) readers need to be familiar with 98% of lexical items for adequate text comprehension, has become highly influential in L2 vocabulary research and pedagogy. However, the 98% critical threshold figure is based on findings from a research project in which a regression analysis was conducted with only 66 university students in New
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Repetition and Incidental Learning of Multiword Units: A Conceptual Multisite Replication Study of Webb, Newton, and Chang (2013) Lang. Learn. (IF 5.24) Pub Date : 2023-11-27 Elke Peters, Eva Puimège, Pawe? Szudarski
This multisite study replicates Webb, Newton, and Chang's (2013) study on the effect of repetition on incidental learning of multiword units (MWUs). Even though more researchers have started to investigate MWUs, most data have been collected from university students. Furthermore, the large effect of MWU repetition on learning reported by Webb et?al. has not yet been corroborated. Data in our study
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Inhibitory and facilitative effects of lexical neighbors in spoken word recognition: The role of language experience Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-11-29 Mona Roxana Botezatu, Dalia L. Garcia
The study evaluated whether the direction (inhibitory or facilitative) of the phonological neighborhood density effect in English spoken word recognition was modulated by the relative strength of competitor activation (neighborhood type) in two groups of English-dominant learners of Spanish who differed in language experience. Classroom learners and heritage learners of Spanish identified spoken English
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Unpacking L2 explicit linguistic knowledge and online processing of the English modals may and can: A comparison of acceptability judgments and self-paced reading Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-11-28 Nadia Mifka-Profozic, David O’Reilly, Leonarda Lovrovic
The present study uses self-paced reading as a measure of online processing and an acceptability judgement task as a measure of offline explicit linguistic knowledge, to understand L2 learners’ comprehension processes and their awareness of subtle differences between the modal auxiliaries may and can. Participants were two groups of university students: 42 native speakers of English and 41 native speakers
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Neural correlates of cross-alphabetic interference and integration in the biliterate brain Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-11-24 Beatriz Bermúdez-Margaretto, Andriy Myachykov, Yang Fu, Grigory Kopytin, Yury Shtyrov
We investigated the neurophysiological mechanisms underlying bi-alphabetic reading using event-related potentials (ERPs). Brain activity was recorded using EEG in a group of Russian–English biliterates during a reading-aloud task with familiar and novel words. Capitalizing on a partial overlap between the Roman and Cyrillic alphabets, the stimuli were presented in L1 Cyrillic, L2 Roman, or in an ambiguous
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Uncovering Sampling Biases, Advancing Inclusivity, and Rethinking Theoretical Accounts in Second Language Acquisition: Introduction to the Special Issue SLA for All? Lang. Learn. (IF 5.24) Pub Date : 2023-11-23 Aline Godfroid, Sible Andringa
The social sciences have grappled with sampling biases, perhaps most notably the prevalent reliance on convenience samples drawn from university student populations. Researchers in second language acquisition (SLA) have likewise taken steps to assess and address the scope of these biases and their effects on theory construction. This special issue presents a collection of replications and registered
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L2 Learners’ Signed Language Processing Relates, In Part, to Perspective-Taking Skills Lang. Learn. (IF 5.24) Pub Date : 2023-11-23 David Quinto-Pozos, Taylor Renee Joyce, Abhra Sarkar, Michael DiLeo, Lynn Hou
The comprehension of signed language requires linguistic and visual–spatial processing, such as perspective-taking for correctly interpreting the layout of a spatial scene. However, little is known about how adult second-language (L2) learners process visual–spatial constructions in a signed language that they are studying, including which angles of viewing are most challenging to process and whether
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The effect of a foreign language on cognitive reappraisal during exposure to a phobic stimulus Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-11-23 Isabel Ortigosa, Irene Jaén, Víctor Costumero, Azucena García-Palacios
This study investigates whether the cognitive reappraisal strategy is influenced by the participant's language (native/foreign) when confronting a fearful stimulus. Sixty participants with subclinical phobia of cockroaches were exposed to several phobic and neutral pictures while they used cognitive reappraisal in their native language or a foreign one. Electrodermal activity, pupil dilation, and self-reports
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Neural effects differ for learning highly iconic versus non-iconic signs in hearing adults Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-11-23 Emily M. Akers, Katherine J. Midgley, Phillip J. Holcomb, Gabriela Meade, Karen Emmorey
Little is known about the neural changes that accompany sign language learning by hearing adults. We used ERPs and a word-sign matching task to assess how learning impacted the N400 priming effect (reduced negativity for translations compared to unrelated trials). English monolinguals (N = 32) learned 100 ASL signs – half highly iconic (meaning was guessable), half non-iconic. In contrast to non-iconic
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Bilectal Exposure Modulates Neural Signatures to Conflicting Grammatical Properties: Norway as a Natural Laboratory Lang. Learn. (IF 5.24) Pub Date : 2023-11-22 Maki Kubota, Jorge González Alonso, Merete Anderssen, Isabel Nadine Jensen, Alicia Luque, Sergio Miguel Pereira Soares, Yanina Prystauka, ?ystein A. Vangsnes, Jade J?rgen Sandstedt, Jason Rothman
The current study investigated gender (control) and number (target) agreement processing in Northern and non-Northern Norwegians living in Northern Norway. Participants varied in exposure to Northern Norwegian (NN) dialect(s), where number marking differs from most other Norwegian dialects. In a comprehension task involving reading NN dialect writing, P600 effects for number agreement were significantly
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Using Parent Report to Measure Vocabulary in Young Bilingual Children: A Scoping Review Lang. Learn. (IF 5.24) Pub Date : 2023-11-21 Adriana Weisleder, Margaret Friend, Angeline Sin Mei Tsui, Virginia A. Marchman
A large number of children are exposed to more than one language. One well-established method of assessing early vocabulary development in monolingual children is parent report; however, its use in bilingual/multilingual contexts is less established and brings unique challenges. In this methodological scoping review, we reviewed studies of early vocabulary development using parent report with bilingual/multilingual
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Measuring Teenage Learners’ Automatized, Explicit, and/or Implicit Knowledge: A Question of Context? Lang. Learn. (IF 5.24) Pub Date : 2023-11-21 Alexandra Schurz
The present study administered six test instruments to 13- to 14-year-old learners of English in Austria and Sweden (N = 213), countries offering settings with more explicit and implicit learning environments, respectively. Confirmatory Factor Analyses for Austria yielded a factor comprising timed grammaticality judgment tests, an oral narrative test, and elicited imitation, labelled in this study
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The effectiveness of note taking through exposure to L2 input: A meta-analysis Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-11-21 Zhouhan Jin, Stuart Webb
There has been increasing interest in the effects of note taking in second language (L2) research. However, no meta-analysis has been conducted to examine the relationship between note taking and learning through exposure to L2 input. We retrieved 28 effect sizes from 21 studies (N = 1992) to explore the overall effects of note taking as well as to examine the extent to which the effectiveness of note
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The impact of explicit instruction in intercultural competence in the world language classroom Mod. Lang. J. (IF 7.5) Pub Date : 2023-11-15 Janice M. Aski, Xinquan Jiang, April D. Weintritt
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Voluntary and cued language switching in late bilingual speakers Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-11-15 Saskia Mooijman, Rob Schoonen, Marina B. Ruiter, Ardi Roelofs
Previous research examining the factors that determine language choice and voluntary switching mainly involved early bilinguals. Here, using picture naming, we investigated language choice and switching in late Dutch–English bilinguals. We found that naming was overall slower in cued than in voluntary switching, but switch costs occurred in both types of switching. The magnitude of switch costs differed
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Are Textbooks Authentic From a Developmental Perspective? A Corpus Analysis of Word Use in Chinese Textbooks in US Universities Appl. Linguist. (IF 4.155) Pub Date : 2023-11-11 Xun Yan, Yuyun Lei, Chilin Shih
There is a prevailing belief that second language (L2) textbooks should strive for authenticity, aiming to accurately and reliably represent natural language use. However, assessing the authenticity of language textbooks is not a straightforward task, as it requires both a comparison between instructional texts and real-world language use and a consideration of the comparison within the broader context
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“Pero yo también estoy aprendiendo”: Negotiating expert and novice positions in heritage–second language learner interaction Mod. Lang. J. (IF 7.5) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Ana Fernández–Dobao
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Self-Repair in Hearing L2 Learners’ Spontaneous Signing: A Developmental Study Lang. Learn. (IF 5.24) Pub Date : 2023-11-07 Johanna Mesch, Krister Sch?nstr?m
This study presents a corpus-based investigation of self-repairs in hearing adult L2 (M2L2, second modality and second language) learners of Swedish Sign Language (Svenskt teckenspr?k, STS). This study analyses M2L2 learners’ STS conversations with a deaf signer and examines the learners’ self-repair practices and whether there are differences among learners of different proficiency levels. This provides
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Between teacher candidates’ reflection and teacher educators’ evaluation: Fluctuations in epistemic (a)symmetry in feedback conversations Mod. Lang. J. (IF 7.5) Pub Date : 2023-11-06 P?nar Turan, Nur Yi?ito?lu Aptoula
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Issues of equity and inclusion in Virtual Exchange Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2023-11-06 Robert O'Dowd
The increasing recognition of the limitations of physical mobility programs has led Foreign Language departments to consider online approaches such as Virtual Exchange (VE) and Blended Mobility as alternatives in international education. These online approaches have the potential to promote inclusion and diversity by providing opportunities for student cohorts who are unable to participate in traditional
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Mapping the predictive role of MLAT subtests for L2 achievement through regression commonality analysis Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-11-06 Philip S. Dale, Richard L. Sparks
Despite the widespread use and effectiveness of the Modern Language Aptitude Test (MLAT) composite score in predicting individual differences in L2 achievement and proficiency, there has been little examination of MLAT subtests, although they have potential for illuminating components of L2 aptitude and the mechanism of prediction. Here we use regression commonality analysis to decompose the predictive
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The processing advantage of multiword sequences: A meta-analysis Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-11-06 Wei Yi, Yanlu Zhong
This meta-analysis synthesized 35 English studies (130 effect sizes, N = 1,981) that employed online tasks to investigate the processing of multiword sequences (MWSs). We examined (a) to what extent MWSs enjoy a processing advantage over novel word combinations; (b) how such a processing advantage is moderated by statistical regularities (i.e., phrasal frequency, association strength), MWS type, and
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The validation crisis in the L2 motivational self system tradition Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-11-06 Ali H. Al-Hoorie, Phil Hiver, Yo In’nami
Concerns have recently been raised about the validity of scales used in the L2 motivational self system tradition, particularly in relation to sufficient discriminant validity among some of its scales. These concerns highlight the need to systematically examine the validity of scales used in this tradition. In this study, we therefore compiled a list of 18 scales in widespread use and administered
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L2 grammar-for-interaction: Functions of “and”-prefaced turns in L2 students’ collaborative talk Mod. Lang. J. (IF 7.5) Pub Date : 2023-11-04 Franti?ek T?ma, Leila K??nt?, Teppo Jakonen
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Linguistic distance dynamically modulates the effects of bilingualism on executive performance in aging Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-11-03 Federico Gallo, Andriy Myachykov, Maria Nelyubina, Yury Shtyrov, Joanna Kubiak, Liliia Terekhina, Jubin Abutalebi
To better explain various neurocognitive consequences of bilingualism, recent investigations have adopted continuous measures of bilingual experience, as opposed to binary bi/monolingual distinctions. However, few studies have considered whether bilingualism's effects on cognition are modulated by the linguistic distance (LD) between L1 and L2, and none of the existing studies has examined cognitive
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Developing advanced L2 German writing: A functionally oriented longitudinal study Mod. Lang. J. (IF 7.5) Pub Date : 2023-10-30 Hiram H. Maxim
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The Acquisition of Strategies to Express Plurality in Hearing Second Language Learners of Sign Language of the Netherlands Lang. Learn. (IF 5.24) Pub Date : 2023-10-30 Eveline Boers-Visker
This study reports on strategies to indicate plural referents in hearing learners of Sign Language of the Netherlands. This is the first explorative study that focuses on L2 expressions of plurality in a sign language. Using data from two datasets, I examined when learners start to express plural and which strategies they apply, and I noted typical learner characteristics. The first study examined
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The Neurocognitive Underpinnings of Second Language Processing: Knowledge Gains from the Past and Future Outlook: A Response to Open Peer Commentaries Lang. Learn. (IF 5.24) Pub Date : 2023-10-25 Janet G. van Hell
Writing a review of the neural underpinnings of second language (L2) learning and processing, with a serious eye to future avenues for research, is among the most fun writing invitations that I have ever received. If not curtailed by Language Learning’s word limit, this article would have become a full issue, or even a book! I am thrilled that my passion for this field and enthusiasm for the future
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Learning Without Awareness by Academic and Nonacademic Samples: An Individual Differences Study Lang. Learn. (IF 5.24) Pub Date : 2023-10-25 Kathy MinHye Kim, Ryo Maie, Kiyo Suga, Zachary F. Miller, Bronson Hui
This study addresses the role of awareness in learning and the variables that may facilitate adult second language (L2) implicit learning. We replicated Williams's (2005) study with a similar group of academic learners enrolled at university as well as a group of non-college-educated adults in order to explore the generalizability of the findings to an underrepresented population in research on L2
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Task communicative function and oral fluency of L1 and L2 speakers Mod. Lang. J. (IF 7.5) Pub Date : 2023-10-25 Astrid Morrison, Parvaneh Tavakoli
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From the Editor: In recognition and?with appreciation Mod. Lang. J. (IF 7.5) Pub Date : 2023-10-24
The individuals listed here served as consultants and referees at various times during the preparation of volume 107 of the MLJ. In printing their names here, I express my gratitude for their many hours of dedicated and knowledgeable service. Authors often comment on the insightful and helpful critiques offered by the referees. Their efforts are well reflected in the quality of the scholarship published
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Inferential evaluation and revision in L1 and L2 text comprehension: An eye movement study Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-10-27 A. I. Pérez, E. Schmidt, I. M. Tsimpli
Text comprehension frequently demands the resolution of no longer plausible interpretations to build an accurate situation model, an ability that might be especially challenging during second language comprehension. Twenty-two native English speakers (L1) and twenty-two highly proficient non-native English speakers (L2) were presented with short narratives in English. Each text required the evaluation
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Discourse-based pronoun resolution in non-native sentence processing Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-10-25 Cecilia Puebla, Claudia Felser
Personal pronouns can potentially be resolved in logical syntax by means of variable binding (VB) or at the discourse-representational level through coreference assignment (CR). Previous research suggests that real-time reference resolution is guided more strongly by discourse-level cues in a non-native language (L2) than in a native language (L1). Here we use the VB/CR distinction to further test
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Introduction to the Special Issue: Learning Sign Languages as Additional Languages: Considering Language- and Modality-Specific Factors Lang. Learn. (IF 5.24) Pub Date : 2023-10-21 Russell S. Rosen, David Quinto-Pozos
Additional language (L2/Ln) research largely focuses on learners whose first languages are spoken and who are learning additional spoken languages. In the past few decades, sign languages have become increasingly popular for hearing students in schools. These students must not only learn the vocabulary and grammar of sign languages but also manage a different modality (that is, the channels of production
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Bilingual attentional control: Evidence from the Partial Repetition Cost paradigm Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-10-20 Grace deMeurisse, Edith Kaan
The effects of bilingual language experience on cognitive control are still debated. A recent proposal is that being bilingual enhances attentional control. This is based on studies showing smaller effects of the nature of the preceding trial on the current trial in bilinguals (Grundy et al., 2017). However, performance on such tasks can also be accounted for by lower-level processes such as the binding
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Usage events and constructional knowledge: A study of two variants of the introductory-it construction Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-10-19 Sakol Suethanapornkul, Sarut Supasiraprapa
Usage-based theories hold that mental representation of language is shaped by a lifetime of usage. Both input to which first language (L1) and second language (L2) users are exposed and their own language production affect their construction learning and entrenchment. The present study investigates L2 users’ knowledge of two introductory-it variants, Adj-that (e.g., it is clear that …) and Adj-to (e
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Linking second language speaking task performance and language testing Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2023-10-18 Peter Skehan
This written version of a plenary to the Language Testing Research Colloquium relates research into second language speaking task performance to language testing. A brief review of models of communicative competence and of speaking is provided. Then, two major areas within testing are discussed: the concepts of difficulty and ability for use. The next section covers research into spoken task-based
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The effect of foreign language and psychological distance on moral judgment in Turkish–English bilinguals Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-10-18 Melisa Yavuz, Aylin C. Küntay, Susanne Brouwer
People's judgements differ systematically while reading moral dilemmas in their native or their foreign language. This so-called Foreign Language Effect (FLE) has been found in many language pairs when tested with artificial, sacrificial moral dilemmas (i.e., Trolley and Footbridge). In Experiment 1, we investigated whether the FLE can be replicated in Turkish (native) – English (foreign) bilinguals
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Emotion effects in second language processing: Evidence from eye movements in natural sentence reading Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-10-18 Enze Tang, Hongwei Ding
There exists insufficient eye-tracking evidence on the differences in emotional word processing between the first language (L1) and second language (L2) readers. This study conducted an eye-tracking experiment to investigate the emotional effects in L2 sentence reading, and to explore the modulation of L2 proficiency and individual emotional states. Adapted from Knickerbocker et al. (2015), the current
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Student Outcomes, Perspectives, and Experiences in Traditional and Flipped L2 American Sign Language Classrooms: A Partial Replication Study Lang. Learn. (IF 5.24) Pub Date : 2023-10-15 Jody H. Cripps, Russell S. Rosen, Aimee M. Sever-Hall, Sheryl B. Cooper, Ronald Fenicle
Foreign language classrooms have historically used classroom lecture-based approaches for instruction. However, the flipped pedagogical approach was recently introduced into foreign language and other classrooms. Studies of the flipped classroom approach in spoken L2 classrooms have generally found a positive impact on student learning outcomes, perceptions and satisfaction compared with the traditional
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Out-of-classroom L2 vocabulary acquisition: The effects of digital activities and school vocabulary Mod. Lang. J. (IF 7.5) Pub Date : 2023-10-16 Batia Laufer, Esther Emma Vaisman
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Interpreting Swearwords in Police Interviews and Perceived Offensiveness of Insults in the UK and Spain Appl. Linguist. (IF 4.155) Pub Date : 2023-10-16 Alberto Hijazo-Gascón, María Gómez-Bedoya, Luna Filipovi?
Despite how damaging the consequences of an inadequate translation of swearwords might be, little attention has been paid to insults, in both academic research and interpreting training. The mistranslation of an insult can affect how the police officer perceives the severity of the punishable offence and makes a judgment about what kind of action is appropriate. This study includes two experiments
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Definite and indefinite article accuracy in learner English: A multifactorial analysis Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-10-13 Kateryna Derkach, Theodora Alexopoulou
We present a learner corpus-based study of English article use (“a”/“the”/?) by L2 learners with four typologically distinct first languages (L1s): German and Brazilian Portuguese (both have articles), Chinese and Russian (no articles). We investigate several semantic and morphosyntactic factors—for example, specificity, prenominal modification that can affect article use. Our analysis of 660 written
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Does spaced practice have the same effects on different second language vocabulary learning activities? Fill-in-the-blanks versus flashcards Mod. Lang. J. (IF 7.5) Pub Date : 2023-10-10 Su Kyung Kim, Stuart Webb
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Individual differences in L2 listening proficiency revisited: Roles of form, meaning, and use aspects of phonological vocabulary knowledge Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-10-12 Kazuya Saito, Takumi Uchihara, Kotaro Takizawa, Yui Suzukida
The present study revisits the differential roles of form, meaning, and use aspects of phonological vocabulary knowledge in L2 listening proficiency. A total of 126 Japanese English-as-a-foreign-language listeners completed the TOEIC Listening test, working memory and auditory processing tests, the Metacognitive Awareness Listening Questionnaire, and several tasks designed to tap into three broad aspects
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The Role of Modality in L2 Learning: The Importance of Learners Acquiring a Second Sign Language (M2L2 and M1L2 Learners) Lang. Learn. (IF 5.24) Pub Date : 2023-10-10 Deborah Chen Pichler, Elena Koulidobrova
Second language acquisition (SLA) research offers valuable insight on how languages are learned and how they coexist and influence each other. Sign language learners offer unique perspectives on SLA, allowing researchers to test theories that are otherwise constrained by access to only one modality. Current literature on sign language learning focuses primarily on bimodal bilinguals, mostly hearing
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RER-LX: A new scale to measure reduced emotional resonance in bilinguals’ later learnt language Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-10-09 Wilhelmiina Toivo, Christoph Scheepers, Jean-Marc DeWaele
In two online survey studies (N = 688 and N = 247, respectively) we developed and validated a new psychometric scale for measuring emotional resonance reduction in bilinguals’ LX (“later learnt language”) relative to their L1 (“first language”). The final scale, dubbed RER-LX (for Reduced Emotional Resonance in LX), comprises 15 items and possesses a number of desirable psychometric properties. It
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Do more proficient writers use fewer cognates in L2? A computational approach Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-10-05 Liat Nativ, Yuval Nov, Noam Ordan, Shuly Wintner, Anat Prior
Bilinguals often show evidence of cross language influences, such as facilitation in processing cognates. Here we use computational methods for analyzing spontaneous English texts written by hundreds of speakers of different L1s, at different levels of English proficiency, to investigate writers’ preference for using cognates over alternative word choices. We focus on English, since a majority of its
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Roles of bilingualism and musicianship in resisting semantic or prosodic interference while recognizing emotion in sentences Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-09-28 Cassandra Neumann, Anastasia Sares, Erica Chelini, Mickael Deroche
Listeners can use the way people speak (prosody) or what people say (semantics) to infer vocal emotions. It can be speculated that bilinguals and musicians can better use the former rather than the latter compared to monolinguals and non-musicians. However, the literature to date has offered mixed evidence for this prosodic bias. Bilinguals and musicians are also arguably known for their ability to
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Processing to learn noncanonical word orders: Exploring linguistic and cognitive predictors of reanalysis in early L2 sentence comprehension Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.73) Pub Date : 2023-09-28 Holger Hopp, Sarah Schimke, Freya Gastmann, David ?werdieck, Gregory J. Poarch
To test the contributions of processing to L2 syntax learning, this study explores (cross-) linguistic and cognitive predictors of sentence reanalysis in the L2 comprehension of relative clauses among low-intermediate L1 German adolescent learners of L2 English. Specifically, we test the degree to which L2 comprehension is affected by L2 proficiency, reanalysis ability in a related, earlier-acquired
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Research on “native” and “non-native” English-speaking teachers: Past developments, current status, and future directions Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2023-09-26 Ali Fuad Selvi, Bedrettin Yazan, Ahmar Mahboob
Recently, we have been witnessing the emergence of scholarly interest and professional advocacy efforts centering on systemic, intersectional, fluid, and contextualized inequalities and dynamic hierarchies constructed by essentialized and idealized (non)native speakerhood (speakerism/speakering) and its personal and professional implications for English language teaching (ELT) profession(als). This
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Both L1 and L2 proficiency impact ToM reasoning in children aged 4 to 6. Painting a more nuanced picture of the relation between bilingualism and ToM Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-09-26 Marta Bia?ecka, Zofia Wodniecka, Karolina Muszyńska, Marta Szpak, Ewa Haman
Previous studies that contrasting bilinguals with monolinguals on Theory of Mind (ToM) have shown mixed results. We present a relatively large (N = 102) study comparing Polish–English sequential bilinguals living in the UK with Polish monolinguals living in Poland. Going beyond a simple group comparison, we explored the role of language proficiency and input in ToM abilities. A battery of eight tasks
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The role of oral vocabulary when L2 speakers read novel words: A complex word training study Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-09-25 Ali Behzadnia, Signy Wegener, Audrey Bürki, Elisabeth Beyersmann
The present study asked whether oral vocabulary training can facilitate reading in a second language (L2). Fifty L2 speakers of English received oral training over three days on complex novel words, with predictable and unpredictable spellings, composed of novel stems and existing suffixes (i.e., vishing, vishes, vished). After training, participants read the novel word stems for the first time (i
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Promoting Minority Language Use to Foster Revitalisation: Insights From New Speakers of West Frisian Appl. Linguist. (IF 4.155) Pub Date : 2023-09-23 Ruth Kircher, Ethan Kutlu, Mirjam Vellinga
Language planners are increasingly aware of the importance of new speakers (individuals acquiring a language outside the home, typically later-on in life) for the revitalisation of minority languages. Yet, little is known about new speakers’ activation (the process by which they become active and habitual minority language users). This article presents a questionnaire-based investigation of new speakers’
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A Call for Methodological Reflexivity in Researching Language Testing and Migration Appl. Linguist. (IF 4.155) Pub Date : 2023-09-23 Laura Schildt, Bart Deygers
A growing scholarly literature in a subfield of applied linguistics focuses on language testing and language requirements for migrants. We sought to understand what theoretical paradigms and methodological approaches have framed this research and propose future research directions. To this end, we conducted a systematic review of articles on language testing and migration published between 2001 and
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Second language speech comprehensibility: A research agenda Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2023-09-22 Dustin Crowther, Daniel R. Isbell
Interest in second language (L2) speech comprehensibility, or listeners’ perceived ease or difficulty of understanding a given utterance, has seen continual growth since Munro and Derwing's (1995) seminal publication in Language Learning. While recognizing the body of knowledge that has developed in the 25 plus years since Munro and Derwing's study, in the present paper we look to the future as we
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73% of the observed bilingual (dis)advantageous effects on cognition stem from sociolinguistic factors: A systematic review Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-09-22 Camilla Masullo, Vittoria Dentella, Evelina Leivada
Being bilingual confers certain behavioral effects. Determining their precise origin is of utmost importance given the need to avoid unjust misattribution of labels such as “bilingual (dis)advantage” to people's bilingual experiences. To this end, this systematic PRISMA-based review aims to shed light on the social and sociolinguistic origins of bilingualism-related behavioral effects. Analyzing 368
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Linguistic Features Distinguishing Students’ Writing Ability Aligned with CEFR Levels Appl. Linguist. (IF 4.155) Pub Date : 2023-09-22 Hong Ma, Jinglei Wang, Lianzhen He
A substantive body of research has been revolving around the linguistic features that distinguish different levels of students’ writing samples (e.g. Crossley and McNamara 2012; McNamara et al. 2015; Lu 2017). Nevertheless, it is somewhat difficult to generalize the findings across various empirical studies, given that different criteria were adopted to measure language learners’ proficiency levels
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Heritage language development and processing: Non-canonical word orders in Mandarin–English child heritage speakers Biling. Lang. Cognit. (IF 4.763) Pub Date : 2023-09-18 Jiuzhou Hao, Vasiliki Chondrogianni, Patrick Sturt
Previous research suggests that child HSs’ performance in offline linguistic tasks is typically worse than their age-matched monolingual peers and is modulated by linguistic and child-level factors. This study examined the comprehension and production of three Mandarin non-canonical structures in 5- to 9-year-old Mandarin–English heritage children and Mandarin-speaking monolingual children, including