Examining the contribution of markedness to the L2 processing of Spanish person agreement: An event-related potentials study
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27772Date
2020-11-10Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
We used event‑related potentials to investigate how markedness impacts person agreement in
English‑speaking learners of L2‑Spanish. Markedness was examined by probing agreement
with both first‑person (marked) and third‑person (unmarked) subjects. Agreement was
manipulated by crossing first‑person subjects with third‑person verbs and vice versa. Native
speakers showed a P600 for both errors, larger for “first‑person subject + third‑person verb”
violations. This aligns with claims that, when the first element in the dependency is marked
(first person), the parser generates stronger predictions regarding upcoming agreeing
elements using feature activation. Twenty‑two upper‑intermediate/advanced learners elicited a P600 across both errors. Learners were equally accurate detecting both errors, but the
P600 was marginally reduced for “first‑person subject + third‑person verb” violations,
suggesting that learners overused unmarked forms (third person) online. However, this
asymmetry mainly characterized lower‑proficiency learners. Results suggest that markedness impacts L2 agreement without constraining it, although learners are less likely to use
marked features top‑down.
Publisher
Cambridge University PressCitation
Banon JA, Miller D, Rothman J. (2021)Examining the contribution of markedness to the L2 processing of Spanish person agreement: An event-related potentials study. Studies in Second Language Acquisition. 43(4), 699-728Metadata
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