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Cross-Linguistic Influence in Early Word Learning

Suhonen, Lari-Valtteri LU orcid (2019) the 12th International Symposium on Bilingualism p.85-85
Abstract
It has often been the presumption that reverse cross-linguistic influence requires an advanced fluency in the second language. This assumption has led to much of the research focusing on the impact of the speaker’s existing languages towards their second or third language. Our mental lexicons are, however, in a constant state of change through learning, forgetting, and consolidation, and we should hence consider the study of language loss as an integral part of language acquisition (Sharwood Smith, 1989). If we want to fully understand the process of language loss, we should start from the early stages of language acquisition. One example of an early change is from Bice and Kroll (2015), who found an emerging cognate effect already at the... (More)
It has often been the presumption that reverse cross-linguistic influence requires an advanced fluency in the second language. This assumption has led to much of the research focusing on the impact of the speaker’s existing languages towards their second or third language. Our mental lexicons are, however, in a constant state of change through learning, forgetting, and consolidation, and we should hence consider the study of language loss as an integral part of language acquisition (Sharwood Smith, 1989). If we want to fully understand the process of language loss, we should start from the early stages of language acquisition. One example of an early change is from Bice and Kroll (2015), who found an emerging cognate effect already at the early changes of L2 learning.In the present experiment the participants were taught an artificial language in which a portion of the words do not conveniently map onto the participants’ native language (English). The purpose of the study was to find whether limited, but observable, automatized effects could be observed in the learner’s mother tongue at the very early stage of language acquisition.A paired-associate learning task was used to teach the form-meaning mappings to the participants. All presented forms in the artificial language were phonotactically well-formed in Finnish. The meanings were all concrete nouns and were borrowed from the participants’ native language.The main dependent measure in the study was the magnitude of the priming effect from the newly acquired associates in the artificial language, measured in the participant’s native language. These measures were compared to the pre-learning baseline. Post-learning data was collected both through an immediate post-test, as well as a delayed post-test after a single-night consolidation period. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
keywords
attrition, lexicon, conceptual knowledge
pages
1 pages
conference name
the 12th International Symposium on Bilingualism
conference location
Edmonton, Canada
conference dates
2018-06-23 - 2018-11-28
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
f2fd3a08-451d-4f2d-b651-f75973e36594
alternative location
http://sites.psych.ualberta.ca/ISB12/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/ISB-12-Program-Ver-2.1.pdf#page=85
date added to LUP
2019-06-30 22:27:17
date last changed
2019-08-15 11:49:13
@misc{f2fd3a08-451d-4f2d-b651-f75973e36594,
  abstract     = {{It has often been the presumption that reverse cross-linguistic influence requires an advanced fluency in the second language. This assumption has led to much of the research focusing on the impact of the speaker’s existing languages towards their second or third language. Our mental lexicons are, however, in a constant state of change through learning, forgetting, and consolidation, and we should hence consider the study of language loss as an integral part of language acquisition (Sharwood Smith, 1989). If we want to fully understand the process of language loss, we should start from the early stages of language acquisition. One example of an early change is from Bice and Kroll (2015), who found an emerging cognate effect already at the early changes of L2 learning.In the present experiment the participants were taught an artificial language in which a portion of the words do not conveniently map onto the participants’ native language (English). The purpose of the study was to find whether limited, but observable, automatized effects could be observed in the learner’s mother tongue at the very early stage of language acquisition.A paired-associate learning task was used to teach the form-meaning mappings to the participants. All presented forms in the artificial language were phonotactically well-formed in Finnish. The meanings were all concrete nouns and were borrowed from the participants’ native language.The main dependent measure in the study was the magnitude of the priming effect from the newly acquired associates in the artificial language, measured in the participant’s native language. These measures were compared to the pre-learning baseline. Post-learning data was collected both through an immediate post-test, as well as a delayed post-test after a single-night consolidation period.}},
  author       = {{Suhonen, Lari-Valtteri}},
  keywords     = {{attrition; lexicon; conceptual knowledge}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{06}},
  pages        = {{85--85}},
  title        = {{Cross-Linguistic Influence in Early Word Learning}},
  url          = {{http://sites.psych.ualberta.ca/ISB12/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/ISB-12-Program-Ver-2.1.pdf#page=85}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}