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Language Usage and Second Language Morphosyntax: Effects of Availability, Reliability, and Formulaicity

Frontiers in psychology, 2021-04, Vol.12, p.582259-582259 [Peer Reviewed Journal]

Copyright © 2021 Guo and Ellis. ;Copyright © 2021 Guo and Ellis. 2021 Guo and Ellis ;ISSN: 1664-1078 ;EISSN: 1664-1078 ;DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.582259 ;PMID: 33995170

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  • Title:
    Language Usage and Second Language Morphosyntax: Effects of Availability, Reliability, and Formulaicity
  • Author: Guo, Rundi ; Ellis, Nick C
  • Subjects: availability ; formulaicity ; morphosyntax ; phrase-superiority effects ; Psychology ; reliability ; SLA
  • Is Part Of: Frontiers in psychology, 2021-04, Vol.12, p.582259-582259
  • Description: A large body of psycholinguistic research demonstrates that both language processing and language acquisition are sensitive to the distributions of linguistic constructions in usage. Here we investigate how statistical distributions at different linguistic levels - morphological and lexical (Experiments 1 and 2), and phrasal (Experiment 2) - contribute to the ease with which morphosyntax is processed and produced by second language learners. We analyze Chinese ESL learners' knowledge of four English inflectional morphemes: , , and third-person on verbs, and plural on nouns. In Elicited Imitation Tasks, participants listened to length- and difficulty-matched sentences each containing one target morpheme and typed the whole sentence as accurately as they could after a short delay. Experiment 1 investigated lexical and morphemic levels, testing the hypotheses that a morpheme is expected to be more easily processed when it is (1) highly (i.e., occurring in frequent word-forms), and (2) highly (i.e., occurring in lemma words that are consistently conjugated in the form containing this morpheme). Thirty sentences were made for each morpheme, divided into three Availability-Reliability Distribution (ARD) groups on the basis of corpus analysis in the Corpus of Contemporary American English (COCA; Davies, 2008-): 10 target words high in availability, 10 high in reliability, and 10 low in both reliability and availability. Responses were scored on whether the target morpheme was accurately reproduced given the provision of the correct lemma. A generalized linear mixed-effects logit model (GLMM) revealed fixed effects of morpheme type, availability, and reliability on the accuracy of morpheme provision. There were no effects of lemma frequency. Experiment 2 successfully replicated these results and extended the investigation to explore phrasal formulaicity by manipulating the frequency of the four-word strings in which the morpheme was embedded. GLMMs replicated the effects of word-form availability and reliability and additionally revealed independent where morphemes were better reproduced in contexts of higher string-frequency. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that morpheme acquisition reflects the distributional properties of learners' experience and the mappings therein between lexis, morphology, phraseology, and semantics. These conclusions support an emergentist view of the statistical symbolic learning of morphology where language acquisition involves the satisfaction of competing constraints across multiple grain sizes of units.
  • Publisher: Switzerland: Frontiers Media S.A
  • Language: English
  • Identifier: ISSN: 1664-1078
    EISSN: 1664-1078
    DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.582259
    PMID: 33995170
  • Source: DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals
    PubMed Central (Training)
    GFMER Free Medical Journals
    ROAD: Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources

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