TY - JOUR
T1 - Spanish-English L2 speakers' use of subcategorization bias information in the resolution of temporary ambiguity during second language reading
AU - Dussias, Paola E.
AU - Cramer Scaltz, Tracy R.
N1 - Funding Information:
The research reported in this paper was supported in part by NIH Grant HD50629 to Paola E. Dussias. We would like to thank Teresa Bajo, Francisca Padilla, Judith Kroll, Noriko Hoshino, Susan Bobb, Robert Hartsuiker and two reviewers for insightful and helpful comments that led to the improvement of this paper. We are very grateful to Michael P. Wilson and Susan Garnsey for providing us with their materials and verb bias norms. Preliminary results were presented at the Fifth International Symposium on Bilingualism, the 2005 Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing, the 30 Boston University Conference on Language Development, and the Second Annual Rovereto Workshop on Bilingualism. We are indebted to the workshop organizers Alfonso Caramazza, Albert Costa and Matthew Finkbeiner. Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Paola E. Dussias, Department of Spanish, Italian and Portuguese, 211 Burrowes Building, Penn State University, University Park, PA, 16802, USA. Electronic mail may be sent to [email protected] or [email protected] .
PY - 2008/7
Y1 - 2008/7
N2 - Using a self-paced moving window reading paradigm, we examine the degree to which structural commitments made while 60 Spanish-English L2 speakers read syntactically ambiguous sentences in their second language (L2) are constrained by the verb's lexical entry about its preferred structural environment (i.e., subcategorization bias). The ambiguity under investigation arises because a noun phrase immediately following a verb can be parsed as either the direct object of the verb 'The CIA director confirmed the rumor when he testified before Congress', or as the subject of an embedded complement 'The CIA director confirmed the rumor could mean a security leak'. In an experiment with 59 monolingual English participants, we replicate the findings reported in the previous literature demonstrating that native speakers are guided by subcategorization bias information during sentence interpretation. In a bilingual experiment, we then show that L2 subcategorization biases influence L2 sentence interpretation. The results indicate that L2 speakers keep track of the relative frequencies of verb-subcategorization alternatives and use this information when building structure in the L2.
AB - Using a self-paced moving window reading paradigm, we examine the degree to which structural commitments made while 60 Spanish-English L2 speakers read syntactically ambiguous sentences in their second language (L2) are constrained by the verb's lexical entry about its preferred structural environment (i.e., subcategorization bias). The ambiguity under investigation arises because a noun phrase immediately following a verb can be parsed as either the direct object of the verb 'The CIA director confirmed the rumor when he testified before Congress', or as the subject of an embedded complement 'The CIA director confirmed the rumor could mean a security leak'. In an experiment with 59 monolingual English participants, we replicate the findings reported in the previous literature demonstrating that native speakers are guided by subcategorization bias information during sentence interpretation. In a bilingual experiment, we then show that L2 subcategorization biases influence L2 sentence interpretation. The results indicate that L2 speakers keep track of the relative frequencies of verb-subcategorization alternatives and use this information when building structure in the L2.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.actpsy.2007.09.004
DO - 10.1016/j.actpsy.2007.09.004
M3 - Article
C2 - 18001689
AN - SCOPUS:47249093739
SN - 0001-6918
VL - 128
SP - 501
EP - 513
JO - Acta Psychologica
JF - Acta Psychologica
IS - 3
ER -