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Gender attraction in sentence comprehension
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In: Glossa: a journal of general linguistics; Vol 6, No 1 (2021); 20 ; 2397-1835 (2021)
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On the status of transfer in adult third language acquisition of early bilinguals
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In: PLoS One (2021)
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Event related potentials at initial exposure in third language acquisition : Implications from an artificial mini-grammar study
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In: Journal of Neurolinguistics ; 56 (2020). - 100939. - Elsevier. - ISSN 0911-6044. - eISSN 1873-8052 (2020)
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A systematic review of transfer studies in third language acquisition
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Formal linguistics approaches to adult second language acquisition and processing
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Evidence from neurolinguistic methodologies : Can it actually inform linguistic/ language acquisition theories and translate to evidence-based applications?
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What is the role of L1 representations in a grammar-input model of L2 acquisition?
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Evidence from neurolinguistic methodologies: can it actually inform linguistic/ language acquisition theories and translate to evidence-based applications?
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From theory to practice in multilingualism: what theoretical research implies for third language learning
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English compound and non-compound processing in bilingual and multilingual speakers: effects of dominance and sequential multilingualism
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Abstract:
This article reports on a study investigating the relative influence of the first and dominant language on L2 and L3 morpho-lexical processing. A lexical decision task compared the responses to English NV-er compounds (e.g., taxi driver) and non-compounds provided by a group of native speakers and three groups of learners at various levels of English proficiency: L1 Spanish-L2 English sequential bilinguals and two groups of early Spanish-Basque bilinguals with English as their L3. Crucially, the two trilingual groups differed in their first and dominant language (i.e., L1 Spanish-L2 Basque vs. L1 Basque-L2 Spanish). Our materials exploit an (a)symmetry between these languages: while Basque and English pattern together in the basic structure of (productive) NV-er compounds, Spanish presents a construction that differs in directionality as well as inflection of the verbal element (V[3SG] + N). Results show between and within group differences in accuracy and response times that may be ascribable to two factors besides proficiency: the number of languages spoken by a given participant and their dominant language. An examination of response bias reveals an influence of the participants' first and dominant language on the processing of NV-er compounds. Our data suggest that morphological information in the nonnative lexicon may extend beyond morphemic structure and that, similarly to bilingualism, there are costs to sequential multilingualism in lexical retrieval.
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URL: https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/59325/4/English%20compound%20and%20non.pdf https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/59325/
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Masked constituent priming of English compounds in native and nonnative speakers
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Neurolinguistic measures of typological effects in multilingual transfer: introducing an ERP methodology
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Assessing multilingual lexical incorporation hypotheses through a primed picture-naming task
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