Usage-Based Perspectives on Second Language Learning 2015
DOI: 10.1515/9783110378528-007
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Structural priming and the acquisition of novel form-meaning mappings

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Cited by 9 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Immediately before and after the priming activity, the participants were asked to describe 10 pictures that were not included in the priming activity. Their production of Esperanto transitives during these activities falls outside the scope of the current study, and is reported elsewhere (McDonough & Trofimovich, in press). …”
mentioning
confidence: 78%
“…Immediately before and after the priming activity, the participants were asked to describe 10 pictures that were not included in the priming activity. Their production of Esperanto transitives during these activities falls outside the scope of the current study, and is reported elsewhere (McDonough & Trofimovich, in press). …”
mentioning
confidence: 78%
“…The Esperanto materials consisted of a picture identification task divided into exposure and test phases based on items used in previous studies (Fulga & McDonough, ; McDonough & Fulga, ; McDonough & Trofimovich, , ). For the exposure phase, the participants listened to 24 simple Esperanto transitive sentences (12 SVO, 12 OVS) and chose one of two images (printed side‐by‐side on paper) that correctly depicted the meaning of each sentence.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…CONSTRUCTION LEARNING STUDIES CARried out by Goldberg and colleagues have shown that first language (L1) speakers of English can comprehend and produce the novel construction of appearance (N 1 N 2 V), with the corresponding meaning of N 1 ‘appears in/on’ N 2 (e.g., the spot the king moopoed ) after relatively brief language exposure (Boyd, Gottschalk, & Goldberg, ; Casenhiser & Goldberg, ; Goldberg & Casenhiser, ; Goldberg, Casenhiser, & Sethuraman, ; Goldberg, Casenhiser, & White, ). However, construction learning studies with second language (L2) speakers have reported far greater variability with a variety of constructions, including the appearance construction and Samoan ergative constructions (Nakamura, ), Esperanto transitives (Fulga & McDonough, ; McDonough & Fulga, ; McDonough & Trofimovich, , ), and English datives (McDonough & Nekrasova–Becker, ; Year & Gordon, ). These studies have shown that L2 speakers experience considerable difficulty when learning new patterns.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Construction learning studies have reported considerable variability in second language (L2) speakers’ success at learning novel morphosyntactic patterns following brief exposure to meaning-based, comprehension activities (Fulga & McDonough, 2016; McDonough & Fulga, 2015; McDonough & Trofimovich, 2013, 2015, 2016; Nakamura, 2012; Year & Gordon, 2009). For example, previous studies that investigated L2 speakers’ ability to learn the key morphological (accusative – n case marking) and syntactic (variable word order: SVO or OVS) features of the Esperanto transitive construction (as in bubalo pelas kapron [SVO] and kapron pelas bubalo [OVS] “buffalo chases goat”) reported an average success rate of only 23% (Fulga & McDonough, 2016; McDonough & Fulga, 2015; McDonough & Trofimovich, 2016).…”
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confidence: 99%