TY - JOUR
T1 - Grammatical gender processing in L2 speakers of Spanish the role of cognate status and gender transparency
AU - Halberstadt, Lauren
AU - Valdés Kroff, Jorge R.
AU - Dussias, Paola E.
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was supported in part by NSF Grant BCS-1535124, NSF Grant OISE-1545900, NIH Grant HD082796, and NIH Grant HDO71758 to Paola Dussias. Lauren Halberstadt was supported with funding from NSF OISE-0968369, and Jorge Valdés Kroff was supported by a Roth-man Faculty Summer Fellowship through the Center for Humanities and the Public Sphere at the University of Florida.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Journal of Second Language Studies. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - Recent findings indicate that native speakers (L1) use grammatical gender marking on articles to facilitate the processing of upcoming nouns (e.g., Lew-Williams & Fernald, 2007; Dussias, Valdés Kroff, Guzzardo Tamargo, & Gerfen, 2013). Conversely, adult second language (L2) learners for whom grammatical gender is absent in their first language appear to need near-native proficiency to behave like native speakers (Dussias et al., 2013; Hopp, 2013). The question addressed here is whether sensitivity to grammatical gender in L2 learners of Spanish is modulated by the cognate status of nouns due to their heightened parallel orthographic, phonological, morpho-syntactic and semantic activation. Additionally, the role of transparent and non-transparent word-final gender marking cues was examined because past studies have shown that native speakers of Spanish are sensitive to differences in gender transparency (Caffarra, Janssen, & Barber, 2014). Participants were English learners of Spanish and Spanish monolingual speakers. Data were collected using the visual world paradigm. Participants saw 2-pic-ture visual scenes in which objects either matched in gender (same-gender trials) or mismatched (different-gender trials). Targets were embedded in the preamble Encuentra el/la _ 'Find the show that native speakers use grammatical gender information encoded in prenominal modifiers predictively. The learners were able to use gender information on the articles to facilitate processing, but only when the nouns had gender endings that were transparent. Cognate status did not confer an advantage during grammatical gender processing.
AB - Recent findings indicate that native speakers (L1) use grammatical gender marking on articles to facilitate the processing of upcoming nouns (e.g., Lew-Williams & Fernald, 2007; Dussias, Valdés Kroff, Guzzardo Tamargo, & Gerfen, 2013). Conversely, adult second language (L2) learners for whom grammatical gender is absent in their first language appear to need near-native proficiency to behave like native speakers (Dussias et al., 2013; Hopp, 2013). The question addressed here is whether sensitivity to grammatical gender in L2 learners of Spanish is modulated by the cognate status of nouns due to their heightened parallel orthographic, phonological, morpho-syntactic and semantic activation. Additionally, the role of transparent and non-transparent word-final gender marking cues was examined because past studies have shown that native speakers of Spanish are sensitive to differences in gender transparency (Caffarra, Janssen, & Barber, 2014). Participants were English learners of Spanish and Spanish monolingual speakers. Data were collected using the visual world paradigm. Participants saw 2-pic-ture visual scenes in which objects either matched in gender (same-gender trials) or mismatched (different-gender trials). Targets were embedded in the preamble Encuentra el/la _ 'Find the show that native speakers use grammatical gender information encoded in prenominal modifiers predictively. The learners were able to use gender information on the articles to facilitate processing, but only when the nouns had gender endings that were transparent. Cognate status did not confer an advantage during grammatical gender processing.
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U2 - 10.1075/jsls.17023.hal
DO - 10.1075/jsls.17023.hal
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85065125266
SN - 2542-3835
VL - 1
SP - 5
EP - 30
JO - Journal of Second Language Studies
JF - Journal of Second Language Studies
IS - 1
ER -