Native and non-native processing of different agreement

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Native and non-native processing of different agreement relations:

an ERP investigation of processing and grammaticalization patterns

Nicoletta Biondo & Simona Mancini

(University of Siena, Italy) (BCBL,Spain)

nicoletta.biondo@unisi.it

February 19th, 2021

IGG46 workshop Multilingualism: Social and Cognitive Dimensions

Aim of the study

Investigate the grammaticalization of Subject-Verb agreement and Adverb-Verb Temporal concord in L2 Spanish speakers (English L1) and Controls.

SUBJECT-VERB (SV) NUMBER

Ayer las chicas/*la chica regresaron a casa tarde.

(Yesterday the girlsPL/*the girl camePL back home late)

ADVERB-VERB (TC) TENSE

Ayer/*Mañana las chicas regresaron a casa tarde.

(YesterdayPAST/*TomorrowFUT the girls camePAST back home late)

‘Primary’ relationSyntacticAcquired ‘early’ in childhoodRelatively preserved in aphasiaImmediate and strong behavioral mismatch effects in healthy adults

‘Non-primary’ relationDiscourse-relatedAcquired ‘later’ in childhoodSeverely impaired in aphasiaLater and smaller behavioral mismatch effects in healthy adults(e.g., Frazier & Clifton, 1996; Mancini et al., 2013; Weist, 2014; Belletti & Guasti, 2015; Friedmann & Grodzinsky, 1997; Clahsen & Ali, 2009; Biondo, 2017; Biondo et al., 2018)

2

Successful instantiation of the grammatical rules of the L2 into the online language processing system of the L2 learner.

• L2 grammaticalization goes through different stages; different stages correspond to different electrophysiological responses to a grammatical error in the L2 (e.g., Steinhauer et al., 2009; Osterhout et al., 2006; McLaughlin et al., 2010)

T1 T2 T3 T4

time

proficiency

Grammaticalization of a L2

L2 grammatical knowledge in the language system

e.g., The cat sleeps.*The cats sleeps.

(Osterhout et al., 2006:219)

3

Successful instantiation of the grammatical rules of the L2 into the online language processing system of the L2 learner.

• L2 grammaticalization goes through different stages; different stages correspond to different electrophysiological responses to a grammatical error in the L2 (e.g., Steinhauer et al., 2009; Osterhout et al., 2006; McLaughlin et al., 2010)

T1 T2 T3 T4

time

proficiency

Grammaticalization of a L2

L2 grammatical knowledge in the language system

4

Hypotheses• Different ERPs triggered by subject-verb and adverb-verb violations, in native sentence

processing

• Different ERPs in second language acquisition → delayed grammaticalization of the temporal concord compared to subject-verb agreement

(300-500ms)

(500-800ms)

Low Intermediate Advanced Native-like

ERPs:broad negativity early negativity early negativity

(N400) (AN) (LAN) + +

small/delayed P600 P600 P600

broad negativity early negativity(N400) (AN)

(no effect) +

small/delayed P600 P600

SV mismatch

TC mismatch

(300-500ms)

(500-800ms)

5

Method• 32 English learners of Spanish (14 low, 10 intermediate, 8 high proficient speakers) and

31 Spanish native speakers (matched in age, gender, education) – ongoing data collection

• Grammaticality judgement task on:Control: Ese novelista ayer temprano presentó su nuevo libro.

(This novelist yesterday early presented his new book)

SV mismatch: *Esos novelistas ayer temprano presentó su nuevo libro.

(These novelists yesterday early presented his new book)

TC mismatch: *Ese novelista mañana temprano presentó su nuevo libro.

(This novelist tomorrow early presented his new book)

• Analysis: ANOVAs on (1) native and non-native speakers’ and on (2) basic, intermediate, high proficient non-native speakers’ (32-ch) ERP data

• Individual differences: regression analyses on participants’ performance/ERP and factors such as L2 proficiency, age of acquisition, months of immersion

+Ese

novelista

500 ms

300 ms

300 ms

2000 ms…

Correct ?

6

Results: grammaticality judgment task

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Results: analysis 1 (L1 vs L2 speakers)

L1 L2

L1

300 – 500 ms 500 – 750 ms 750 – 1000 ms

L1 broad P600 for SV P600 for SV (broad) > TC (posterior)

L2 sustained negativity for TC (trend to P600 for SV)

8

Results: analysis 2 (low, intermediate, high L2)

L2

L1

Low Intermediate High

500 – 750 ms 750 – 1000 ms

Low sustained negativity for TC

Intermediate sustained negativity for TC > SV

High P600 for SV (trend to P600 for SV > TC)

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Results: regression analysesL2

L1

SV

TC

D-prime scores

LAN

am

plit

ud

e

L2 Proficiency scores

Months of immersion

L2 age of acquisition

10

Discussion

• L1 speakers process SV and TC mismatches differently • early and late P600, bigger for SV compared to TC mismatches → larger integration and repair costs for primary SV compared

to non-primary TC (in line with Biondo, 2017; Biondo et al., 2018)

• L2 speakers show a different pattern for SV and TC, but in an unexpected direction especially in early stages of grammaticalization• L2, low: sustained negativity only for TC mismatches

• L2, intermediate: larger sustained negativity for TC compared to SV mismatches

• L2, high: trend to a (native-like) P600 pattern, especially for SV mismatches

• Proficiency is a reliable predictor of morpho-syntactic processing at the behavioral level • regression analyses show that the higher the proficiency, the higher the d-prime scores (in line with e.g., Aleman Bañon et al.,

2018)

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Discussion

• What is the nature of this sustained negativity in early stages of grammaticalization?

• L2 speakers may have difficulties with TC mismatches because they require the integration of syntactic and non -syntactic information (Interface Hypothesis - Sorace & Filiaci, 2006; Sorace, 2011)

→ this hypothesis may explain the ERP pattern in the L2 advanced speakers, but what about the ERP pattern in L2 low speakers?

• L2 speakers may prioritize semantic/pragmatic information over syntactic information (Shallow Structure Hypothesis - Clahsen& Felser 2006, 2018)

→ this hypothesis may explain the pattern in L2 low speakers, but what about the sustained negativity for SV mismatches in L2 intermediate speakers?

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This research has been financially supported by:

www.fondazionedevincenzi.org

Acknowledgements

Order of appearance:

Frazier, L., & Clifton, C. (1996). Construal. Mit Press.

Mancini, S., Molinaro, N., & Carreiras, M. (2013). Anchoring agreement in comprehension. Language and linguistics compass, 7(1), 1-21.

Weist, R. M. (2014). Developing temporal systems. Psychology of Language and Communication, 18(2), 126-142.

Belletti, A., & Guasti, M. T. (2015). The Acquisition of Italian: Morphosyntax and its interfaces in different modes of acquisition (Vol. 57). John Benjamins Publishing Company.

Friedmann, N. A., & Grodzinsky, Y. (1997). Tense and agreement in agrammatic production: Pruning the syntactic tree. Brain and language, 56(3), 397-425.

Clahsen, H., & Ali, M. (2009). Formal features in aphasia: tense, agreement, and mood in English agrammatism. Journal of Neurolinguistics, 22(5), 436-450.

Biondo, N. (2017). The Syntactic Side of Time: Processing Adverb-Verb Temporal Agreement (Doctoral dissertation, University of Trento).

Biondo, N., Vespignani, F., Rizzi, L., & Mancini, S. (2018). Widening agreement processing: a matter of time, features and distance. Language, Cognition and Neuroscience, 33(7), 890-911.

Steinhauer, K., White, E. J., & Drury, J. E. (2009). Temporal dynamics of late second language acquisition: Evidence from event-related brain potentials. Second Language Research, 25(1), 13-41.

Osterhout, L., McLaughlin, J., Pitkänen, I., Frenck‐Mestre, C., & Molinaro, N. (2006). Novice learners, longitudinal designs, and event‐related potentials: A means for exploring the neurocognition of second language processing. Language Learning, 56, 199-230.

McLaughlin, J., Tanner, D., Pitkänen, I., Frenck‐Mestre, C., Inoue, K., Valentine, G., & Osterhout, L. (2010). Brain potentials reveal discrete stages of L2 grammatical learning. Language Learning, 60, 123-150.

Sorace, A., & Filiaci, F. (2006). Anaphora resolution in near-native speakers of Italian. Second language research, 22(3), 339-368.

Sorace, A. (2011). Pinning down the concept of “interface” in bilingualism. Linguistic approaches to bilingualism, 1(1), 1-33.

Clahsen, H., & Felser, C. (2006). How native-like is non-native language processing?. Trends in cognitive sciences, 10(12), 564-570.

Clahsen, H., & Felser, C. (2018). Some notes on the shallow structure hypothesis. Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 40(3), 693-706.

Alemán Bañón, J., Fiorentino, R., & Gabriele, A. (2018). Using event-related potentials to track morphosyntactic development in second language learners: The processing of number and gender agreement in Spanish. PloS one, 13(7), e0200791.

References

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