The role of differential cross-linguistic influence and other constraints in predictive L2 gender processing
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/34376Dato
2024-07-17Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Previous studies on the use of morphosyntactic gender cues for linguistic prediction show that
non-native speakers’ use of grammatical gender information is influenced by various factors.
In the present study, we examined the influence of differential cross-linguistic influence (DCLI),
knowledge of L2 lexical gender, gender congruency, and L2 fluency. To this end, we investigated
L1 Oromo L2 Amharic speakers as well as L1 Amharic speakers, using the Visual World Paradigm
(VWP) and supplementary offline experiments. We investigated two groups of L2 Amharic
speakers, i.e., L1 Eastern Oromo L2 Amharic and L1 Western Oromo L2 Amharic speakers. The
Eastern Oromo dialect patterns with Amharic in terms of gender agreement unlike the Western
Oromo dialect which does not have grammatical gender. Analyses of the participants’ proportion
of eye fixations show that early exposure to the gendered Eastern Oromo dialect facilitates
predictive L2 gender processing. L2 fluency, the speakers’ knowledge of L2 lexical gender and
specific properties of the gender cues modulate predictive L2 gender processing. However, there
is no significant influence of lexical gender congruency. The study has ecological significance as
it presents empirical data from understudied languages.
Forlag
eScholarship PublishingSitering
Feleke TL, Lohndal T. The role of differential cross-linguistic influence and other constraints in predictive L2 gender processing. Glossa Psycholinguistics. 2024;3(1):1-43Metadata
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