Literature DB >> 23493761

Using eye-tracking to study the on-line processing of case-marking information among intermediate L2 learners of German.

Carrie N Jackson1, Paola E Dussias, Adelina Hristova.   

Abstract

This study uses eye-tracking to examine the processing of case-marking information in ambiguous subject- and object-first wh-questions in German. The position of the lexical verb was also manipulated via verb tense to investigate whether verb location influences how intermediate L2 learners process L2 sentences. Results show that intermediate L2 German learners were sensitive to case-marking information, exhibiting longer processing times on subject-first than object-first sentences, regardless of verb location. German native speakers exhibited the opposite word order preference, with longer processing times on object-first than subject-first sentences, replicating previous findings. These results are discussed in light of current L2 processing research, highlighting how methodological constraints influence researchers' abilities to measure the on-line processing of morphosyntactic information among intermediate L2 learners.

Entities:  

Keywords:  German; eye-tracking; reading comprehension; second language acquisition; syntactic processing; word order

Year:  2012        PMID: 23493761      PMCID: PMC3593600     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IRAL Int Rev Appl Linguist Lang Teach        ISSN: 0019-042X


  5 in total

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4.  Who Did What and When? Using Word- and Clause-Level ERPs to Monitor Working Memory Usage in Reading.

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5.  Making simple sentences hard: Verb bias effects in simple direct object sentences.

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Journal:  J Mem Lang       Date:  2009-04-01       Impact factor: 3.059

  5 in total

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