Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (44)
- Postprint (23)
- Other (3)
- Part of Periodical (1)
- Preprint (1)
Keywords
- morphology (14)
- late bilinguals (10)
- derivation (8)
- inflection (8)
- masked priming (7)
- morphologically complex words (5)
- second language (5)
- 2nd-language (4)
- agreement (4)
- english (4)
Institute
- Department Linguistik (41)
- Humanwissenschaftliche Fakultät (21)
- Potsdam Research Institute for Multilingualism (PRIM) (5)
- Department Psychologie (3)
- Multilingualism (3)
- Institut für Germanistik (1)
- Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät (1)
- Strukturbereich Bildungswissenschaften (1)
- Strukturbereich Kognitionswissenschaften (1)
- Verband für Patholinguistik e. V. (vpl) (1)
This study presents results from a cross-modal priming experiment investigating inflected verb forms of German. A group of late learners of German with Russian as their native language (L1) was compared to a control group of German L1 speakers. The experiment showed different priming patterns for the two participant groups. The L1 German data yielded a stem-priming effect for inflected forms involving regular affixation and a partial priming effect for irregular forms irrespective of stem allomorphy. By contrast, the data from the late bilinguals showed reduced priming effects for both regular and irregular forms. We argue that late learners rely more on lexically stored inflected word forms during word recognition and less on morphological parsing than native speakers.
Accessing morphosyntax in L1 and L2 word recognition A priming study of inflected German adjectives
(2016)
In fusional languages, inflectional affixes may encode multiple morphosyntactic features such as case, number, and gender. To determine how these features are accessed during both native (L1) and non-native (L2) word recognition, the present study compares the results from a masked visual priming experiment testing inflected adjectives of German to those of a previous overt (cross-modal) priming experiment on the same phenomenon. While for the L1 group both experiments produced converging results, a group of highly-proficient Russian L2 learners of German showed native-like modulations of repetition priming effects under overt, but not under masked priming conditions. These results indicate that not only affixes but also their morphosyntactic features are accessible during initial form-based lexical access, albeit only for L1 and not for L2 processing. We argue that this contrast is in line with other findings suggesting that non-native language processing is less influenced by structural information than the L1.