Individual language experience determinants of morphosyntactic variation in heritage and attriting speakers of Bosnian and Serbian
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/36126Dato
2024-11-18Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Using a causal inference approach, we explored the relationships among the
language experience determinants of morphosyntactic sensitivity, to
identify the factors that indirectly and directly cause its acquisition or
maintenance in immigration contexts. We probed the sensitivity to Serbian/
Bosnian clitic placement violations with a self-paced listening task, in a
diverse group of bilinguals in Norway (n=71), born to immigrant parents,
or having emigrated in childhood or adulthood. The outcomes included a
metalinguistic violation detection score and a listening/processing time
difference between licit and illicit structures.
Structural Equation Models revealed that literacy (as reading practices)
was among the most influential determinants of the ability to detect
violations, while Bosnian/Serbian use across contexts and age of
bilingualism onset determined violation sensitivity in processing. We
identified a significant threshold of societal language (SL) exposure at age 8.
Rather than SL exposure before this age precluding bilinguals from
developing and maintaining morphosyntactic sensitivity, this threshold
seems to reflect a protective effect against attrition which intensifies the later
after age 8 SL exposure starts. The length of residence in Norway did not
determine attrition, suggesting that heritage and attrited speakers should be
considered on a continuum rather than as distinct bilingualism profiles.
Forlag
John Benjamins Publishing CompanySitering
Tomić A, Rodina Y, Bayram F, De Cat CM. Individual language experience determinants of morphosyntactic variation in heritage and attriting speakers of Bosnian and Serbian. Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism. 2024Metadata
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