The precursors of second language acquisition : a cross-linguistic study.

Cross-linguistic transfer in second language acquisition is an active area of research. Second language (L2) learners bring with them their first language (L1) experience; in the lexical dimension, experience with the L1 orthography influences L2 lexical processing. Using the data from sixteen Engli...

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Main Author: Or, Hui Fang.
Other Authors: School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2013
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52206
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-522062019-12-10T14:31:44Z The precursors of second language acquisition : a cross-linguistic study. Or, Hui Fang. School of Humanities and Social Sciences Chan Hiu Dan Alice DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics::Psycholinguistics Cross-linguistic transfer in second language acquisition is an active area of research. Second language (L2) learners bring with them their first language (L1) experience; in the lexical dimension, experience with the L1 orthography influences L2 lexical processing. Using the data from sixteen English-Chinese biliterates, this study investigated cross-linguistic transfer arising from previous language experience with both alphabetic and logographic languages during the learning of artificial languages that were orthographically similar to English and Chinese. A battery of cognitive and literacy-related tasks was administered at pre-training. Two miniature artificial languages modeled after English and Chinese in terms of mapping principle were created and each language was learned over a span of three training sessions. Results show that the early bilinguals were sensitive to the probabilistic information specific to the respective artificial languages, thereby demonstrating associative learning. Correlation analyses further revealed that phonological awareness and visual sequential memory were associated with successful learning for the alphabetic artificial language whereas English orthographic skills and visual-spatial skills were associated with the logographic artificial language learning performance. The findings suggest that there may be precursors to learning a L2 but cognitive factors associated with cross-language transfer seems to be largely influenced by previous linguistic experience. Bachelor of Arts 2013-04-25T03:44:28Z 2013-04-25T03:44:28Z 2013 2013 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52206 en Nanyang Technological University 47 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics::Psycholinguistics
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics::Psycholinguistics
Or, Hui Fang.
The precursors of second language acquisition : a cross-linguistic study.
description Cross-linguistic transfer in second language acquisition is an active area of research. Second language (L2) learners bring with them their first language (L1) experience; in the lexical dimension, experience with the L1 orthography influences L2 lexical processing. Using the data from sixteen English-Chinese biliterates, this study investigated cross-linguistic transfer arising from previous language experience with both alphabetic and logographic languages during the learning of artificial languages that were orthographically similar to English and Chinese. A battery of cognitive and literacy-related tasks was administered at pre-training. Two miniature artificial languages modeled after English and Chinese in terms of mapping principle were created and each language was learned over a span of three training sessions. Results show that the early bilinguals were sensitive to the probabilistic information specific to the respective artificial languages, thereby demonstrating associative learning. Correlation analyses further revealed that phonological awareness and visual sequential memory were associated with successful learning for the alphabetic artificial language whereas English orthographic skills and visual-spatial skills were associated with the logographic artificial language learning performance. The findings suggest that there may be precursors to learning a L2 but cognitive factors associated with cross-language transfer seems to be largely influenced by previous linguistic experience.
author2 School of Humanities and Social Sciences
author_facet School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Or, Hui Fang.
format Final Year Project
author Or, Hui Fang.
author_sort Or, Hui Fang.
title The precursors of second language acquisition : a cross-linguistic study.
title_short The precursors of second language acquisition : a cross-linguistic study.
title_full The precursors of second language acquisition : a cross-linguistic study.
title_fullStr The precursors of second language acquisition : a cross-linguistic study.
title_full_unstemmed The precursors of second language acquisition : a cross-linguistic study.
title_sort precursors of second language acquisition : a cross-linguistic study.
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52206
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