- Home
- Collections
- Language Acquisition and Language Disorders (vols. 1–58, 1989–2015)
Language Acquisition and Language Disorders (vols. 1–58, 1989–2015)
/content/collections/jbe-2015-lald
Language Acquisition and Language Disorders (vols. 1–58, 1989–2015)
OK
Cancel
Price: € 5394.95 + Taxes
Collection Contents
2
results
-
-
Research in Second Language Processing and Parsing
Editor(s): Bill VanPatten and Jill JegerskiMore LessThis volume is the first dedicated to the growing field of theory and research on second language processing and parsing. The fourteen papers in this volume offer cutting-edge research using a number of different languages (e.g., Arabic, Spanish, Japanese, French, German, English) and structures (e.g., relative clauses, wh-gaps, gender, number) to examine various issues in second language processing: first language influence, whether or not non-natives can achieve native-like processing, the roles of context and prosody, the effects of working memory, and others. The researchers include both established scholars and newer voices, all offering important insights into the factors that affect processing and parsing in a second language.
-
-
-
Representational Deficits in SLA
Editor(s): Neal Snape, Yan-kit Ingrid Leung and Michael Sharwood SmithMore LessThe main focus of this collection is to explore the question of “representational deficits” in second language acquisition, currently a much-debated topic. The volume is intended as a tribute to Roger Hawkins, a leading scholar in generative second language acquisition, whose research has been devoted to explaining lack of native-like success in terms of representational deficits. The papers in this volume feature a range of studies, all undertaken within a generative linguistic framework, which investigate various properties of L2 grammar bearing on the question of whether or not there are representational deficits in the post-critical-period L2 learners’ grammar. The significance of such deficits, if their existence can be confirmed, is that they provide support for the claim, at least for the type of L2 learner under investigation, that there are insurmountable obstacles to ultimate attainment.
-