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High variability phonetic training (HVPT): A meta-analysis of L2 perceptual training studies Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-06-04
Takumi Uchihara, Michael Karas, Ron I. ThomsonThis meta-analysis of 79 studies evaluates the effectiveness of high variability phonetic training (HVPT) for the development of second language (L2) speech perception and explores learner-related and methodological variables that influence training effects. The overall medium-to-large effects of HVPT on L2 speech perception support the effectiveness of HVPT, for both pretest-posttest comparison (g
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How does language distance affect reading fluency and comprehension in English as second language? Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-28
Victor KupermanAcquisition of reading skill in a second language (L2) requires development and coordinated use of multiple component skills. This acquisition is less effortful the more similar the first language (L1) of the L2 learner is to that L2. While ways to quantify the L1–L2 distance are well defined in the current literature, the theoretical status of this distance in models of L2 reading acquisition is under-specified
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Disfluency doesn’t happen in isolation Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-19
Xun Yan, Ping-Lin Chuang, Yulin Pan, Huiying Cai, Shelley Staples, Mariana Centanin BerthoThe construct of second language (L2) utterance fluency is typically operationalized through various individual temporal features. However, in natural speech, fluency (or disfluency) is often characterized by the clustering of multiple temporal features, collectively revealing the speaker’s effort in speech production or disfluency recovery. In this study, we explore the co-occurrence patterns of disfluency
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Testing the three-stage model of second language skill acquisition Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-23
Ryo Maie, Aline GodfroidSkill acquisition theory conceptualizes second language (L2) learning in three stages (declarative, procedural, and automatic), yet competing theoretical models with fewer stages also exist, and the number of stages has never actually been tested. We tested the validity of the three-stage model by investigating the number and nature of learning stages in L2 skill acquisition. Seventy-three participants
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Study and instrument quality in perception-based L2 pronunciation research Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-14
Maria Kostromitina, Ekaterina Sudina, Eman BaghlafThis methodological synthesis surveys study and instrument quality in L2 pronunciation research by scrutinizing methodological practices in designing and employing scales and rubrics that measure accentedness, comprehensibility, and intelligibility. A comprehensive coding scheme was developed, and searches were conducted in several databases. A total of 380 articles (409 samples) that employed 576
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Validity evidence for an EIT as an assessment for Spanish heritage speakers and L2 learners Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-10
Sara Saez-Fajardo, Melissa A. BowlesAs the field of heritage language acquisition expands, there is a need for proficiency to compare speakers across groups and studies. Elicited imitation tasks (EITs) are efficient cost-effective tasks with a long tradition in proficiency assessment of second language (L2) learners, first language children, and adults. However, little research has investigated their use with heritage speakers (HSs)
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The relationship between boredom and second language achievement: A multilevel meta-analysis Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-31
Fangwei Huang, Haijing ZhangThere has been a growing emphasis on researching foreign language boredom in second language acquisition in recent years. However, existing research has yet to reach a consensus regarding the effect of foreign language boredom on learners’ learning achievement. To address this gap, the present study employs multilevel meta-analysis to analyze 47 effect sizes from 33 empirical studies involving a total
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The interplay of learners’ cognitive abilities in the learning and automatization of miniature language grammar Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-28
Małgorzata Foryś-Nogala, Olga Broniś, Aleksandra JanczarskaThis study focused on the relative contributions of cognitive aptitudes to the incidental learning and automatization of mini-language grammar. Over three sessions, participants (N = 45; first language [L1] Polish; age range: 19–35) completed computerized training in MiniItaliano as well as tasks tapping into working memory, general intelligence, and language analytic ability (LAA). The overt aim of
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Exploring the potential of content-embedded working memory capacity tasks for advancing second language acquisition research Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-25
Janire Zalbidea, Bernard I. IssaThis article explores the utility of content-embedded working memory capacity (WMC) tasks for advancing second language (L2) research. While both complex span and content-embedded tasks implement a dual-task paradigm that requires processing and maintenance of information, they differ in that the former demand maintenance of extraneous memory elements during processing, while the latter demand processing
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New data on text reading in English as a second language Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-12
Victor Kuperman, Sascha Schroeder, Cengiz Acartürk, Niket Agrawal, Dominick M. Alexandre, Lena S. Bolliger, Jan Brasser, César Campos-Rojas, Denis Drieghe, Dušica Filipović Đurđević, Luiz Vinicius Gadelha de Freitas, Sofya Goldina, Romualdo Ibáñez Orellana, Lena A. Jäger, Ómar I. Jóhannesson, Anurag Khare, Nik Kharlamov, Hanne B. S. Knudsen, Árni Kristjánsson, Charlotte E. Lee, Jun Ren Lee, MarinaThis paper reports an expansion of the English as a second language (L2) component of the Multilingual Eye Movement Corpus (MECO L2), an international database of eye movements during text reading. While the previous Wave 1 of the MECO project (Kuperman et al., 2023) contained English as a L2 reading data from readers with 12 different first language (L1) backgrounds, the newly collected dataset adds
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Why you should stop using the ideal L2 self and the L2 motivational self-system to measure motivation (Reaction to Al-Hoorie, Hiver & In’nami, 2024) Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-10
Neil McClelland, Jenifer Larson-HallThis paper responds to Al-Hoorie, Hiver, and In’nami’s (2024) critique of the second language (L2) Motivational Self System (L2MSS) by advocating for an immediate cessation of its use in the absence of substantial revision and validation. We revisit foundational studies in the tradition, exposing critical methodological flaws that we feel undermine empirical support for the model. Further, we examine
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Affect as a component of second language speech perception Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-17
John Dylan Burton, Paula WinkeGrowing evidence suggests that ratings of second language (L2) speech may be influenced by perceptions of speakers’ affective states, yet the size and direction of these effects remain underexplored. To investigate these effects, 83 raters evaluated 30 speech samples using 7-point scales of four language features and ten affective states. The speech samples were 2-min videorecordings from a high-stakes
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The role of multiword sequences in fluent speech Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-12
Kotaro Takizawa, Shungo SuzukiThis study explored how second language (L2) speakers’ use of multiword sequences in speech predicted perceived fluency ratings while controlling for their utterance fluency. A total of 102 Japanese speakers of English delivered an argumentative speech, which was analyzed for bigram and trigram measures (frequency, proportion, and mutual information) and utterance fluency measures capturing three subdimensions:
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Challenges in inflected word processing for L2 speakers: The role of stem allomorphy Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-11
Rosa Salmela, Minna Lehtonen, Seppo Vainio, Raymond BertramMorphological knowledge refers to the ability to recognize and use morphemes correctly in syntactic contexts and word formation. This is crucial for learning a morphologically rich language like Finnish, which features both agglutinative and fusional morphology. In Finnish, agglutination occurs in forms like aamu: aamu+lla (‘morning: in the morning’), where a suffix is transparently added. Fusional
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Disentangling the causal role of motivation, enjoyment, and anxiety in second language speech learning: A final report Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-11
Kazuya Saito, Jean-Marc Dewaele, Yo In’nami, Mariko AbeWhile our earlier report focused on the initial four months of the dataset (Saito et al., 2018, Language Learning), this study investigates the relationship between individual differences in motivation (Ideal Self and Ought–to Self), emotions (Enjoyment and Anxiety), and L2 speech learning among 121 Japanese English–as–a–Foreign–Language high school students over 1.5–years. Participants’ L2 speech
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The relationships among L2 fluency, intelligibility, comprehensibility, and accentedness: A meta-analysis Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-06
Tuc Chau, Amanda HuenschFluency, intelligibility, comprehensibility, and accentedness are important dimensions of second language (L2) pronunciation proficiency representing global, listener-based intuitions. This study meta-analyzed 49 reports from 1995 to 2023, examining 141 effect sizes (Pearson r) to understand their relationships and possible moderators. Three-level meta-analysis models showed weighted mean correlations
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Effects of phonetic training and cognitive aptitude on the perception and production of non-native speech contrasts Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-05
Susana Correia, Anabela Rato, Yuxin Ge, João Dinis Fernandes, Magdalena Kachlicka, Kazuya Saito, Patrick RebuschatResearch on second language (L2) speech learning suggests that incidental perception training can lead to the establishment of non-native phonological categories. The present study contributes to this line of enquiry by investigating how this training is mediated by individual differences in working memory capacity and domain-general auditory processing abilities. In our study, 130 native British English
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The impact of collocational proficiency features on expert ratings of L2 English learners’ writing Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-05
Ben Naismith, Alan JuffsLexical proficiency is a multifaceted phenomenon that greatly impacts human judgments of writing quality. However, the importance of collocations’ contribution to proficiency assessment has received less attention than that of single words, despite collocations’ essential role in language production. This study, therefore, investigated how aspects of collocational proficiency affect the ratings that
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Assessing accent anxiety: A measure of foreign English speakers’ concerns about their accents Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-30
Qingyao Xue, Kimberly NoelsAdditional language speakers (ALSs) often experience anxiety due to challenges posed by their nonstandard pronunciation. Building on these insights, this paper introduces an instrument, the Accent Anxiety Scale (AAS), specifically designed to assess three sources of anxiety that are experienced by ALSs, including (a) apprehension about negative evaluations from other individuals due to their distinctive
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Cross-language interactions of phonetic and phonological processes: Intervocalic plosive lenition in Afrikaans-Spanish bilinguals Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-30
Andries W. Coetzee, Nicholas Henriksen, Lorenzo García-AmayaThis paper explores how long-term bilingualism affects the production of intervocalic plosive consonants (/p t k b d ɡ/) in the speech of Afrikaans–Spanish bilinguals from Patagonia, Argentina. We performed sociolinguistic interviews with three speaker groups: L1-Afrikaans/L2-Spanish bilinguals (14 speakers, interviewed separately in Spanish and Afrikaans), L1-Spanish comparison speakers from Patagonia
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Modulating motion event categorization through brief training: Meaning-focused versus form-focused instructional conditions Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-13
Yuyan Xue, John N. WilliamsThere is evidence that learning a second language (L2) can shift cognition toward that predicted for the L2 and that this effect might vary with L2 proficiency, age of acquisition, length of immersion, etc. Here we explore the previously neglected variable of language instructional conditions. Participants categorized motion events in a triads-matching task after being trained on two novel linguistic
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Why are some articles highly cited in applied linguistics? A bibliometric study Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-13
Sai Zhang, Vahid AryadoustThis study investigated factors influencing the citations of highly cited applied linguistics research over two decades. With a pool of 302 of the top 1% most cited articles in the field, we identified 11 extrinsic factors that were independent of scientific merit but could significantly predict citation counts, including journal-related, author-related, and article-related features. Specifically,
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Optimizing distributed practice online: A conceptual replication of Cepeda et al. (2009) Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-08
John Rogers, Tatsuya Nakata, Ming Ming ChiuThis study conceptually replicates Cepeda, Coburn, Rohrer, Wixted, Mozer, & Pashler’s (2009, Experiment 1) study on the effects of distributed practice on second language (L2) vocabulary learning to examine its generalizability to a new context and population sample. The secondary focus of the paper is to examine the challenges and affordances of online data collection and participant recruitment sites
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Embarrassment in English language classrooms: Conceptualization, antecedents, and consequences Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-07
Gholam Hassan Khajavy, Dávid Smid, Sarah Mercer, Carlos Murillo-MirandaThis study is designed to understand embarrassment in the second/foreign language (L2) context. Following a mixed-method design, in Phase 1, a sample of 141 tertiary-level Austrian English language learners were asked to write a narrative about their experiences of embarrassment in their language learning histories. Analyzing the narratives showed that L2 embarrassment is a multidimensional construct
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Contextual learning and retention of phrasal verbs: The effects of definition placement and typographic enhancement Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-03
Mojtaba Tadayonifar, Irina Elgort, Anna Siyanova-ChanturiaA common way of acquiring multiword expressions is through language input, such as during reading and listening. However, this type of learning is slow. Identifying approaches that optimize learning from input, therefore, is an important language-learning endeavor. In the present study, 85 learners of English as a foreign language read short texts with 42 figurative English phrasal verbs, repeated
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Different variables hold varying significance from childhood to adolescence: Exploring individual differences in grammar development of Japanese heritage speakers Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-02
Maki Kubota, Yuka Goto, Satsuki Kurokawa, Yuko Matsuoka, Masashi Otani, Jason RothmanThe current study examined the comprehension and production of classifiers, case marking, and morphological passive structures among 414 child Japanese heritage speakers (mean age = 10.01 years; range = 4.02 – 18.18). Focusing on individual differences, we extracted latent experiential factors via the Q-BEx questionnaire (De Cat, Kašćelan, Prévost, Serratrice, Tuller, Unsworth, & The Q.-Be Consortium
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Replication studies in second language acquisition research: Definitions, issues, resources, and future directions: Introduction to the special issue Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-12-16
Kevin McManusA long-standing concern in the field of second language acquisition is that replication studies are not only infrequent but also poorly designed, reported, and labeled. This special issue responds to an urgent need for action by showcasing eleven high-quality replication studies. In doing so, this collection highlights exemplary standards in replication study design and reporting. This introduction
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Phonological processing and the L2 mental lexicon: Looking back and moving forward Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-12-05
Isabelle Darcy, Miquel Llompart, Rachel Hayes-Harb, Joan C. Mora, Miren Adrian, Svetlana Cook, Mirjam ErnestusTwenty-five years ago, the publication of an article by Pallier, Colomé, and Sebastián-Gallés (2001) launched a new and rapidly evolving research program on how second language (L2) learners represent the phonological forms of words in their mental lexicons. Many insights are starting to form an overall picture of the unique difficulties for establishing functional and precise phonolexical representations
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The role of processing goals in second language predictive processing: A visual–world eye–tracking study of Korean honorific agreement Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-12-04
Hyunwoo Kim, Kitaek Kim, Joonhee KimThis study investigates how second language (L2) learners engage in prediction based on their processing goals. While prediction is a prominent feature of human sentence comprehension in first–language speakers, it remains less understood when and how L2 learners engage in predictive processing. By conducting a visual–world eye–tracking experiment involving Chinese–speaking L2 learners of Korean, we
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A meta-analysis of the reliability of second language reading comprehension assessment tools Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-25
Huijun Zhao, Vahid AryadoustThe present study aims to meta-analyze the reliability of second language (L2) reading assessments and identify the potential moderators of reliability in L2 reading comprehension tests. We examined 3,247 individual studies for possible inclusion and assessed 353 studies as eligible for the inclusion criteria. Of these, we extracted 150 Cronbach’s alpha estimates from 113 eligible studies (years 1998–2024)
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A Bayesian approach to (re)examining learning effects of cognitive linguistics–inspired instruction: A close replication of Wong, Zhao, and MacWhinney (2018) Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-22
Man Ho Ivy Wong, Jakob PrangeThis study closely replicates Wong, Zhao, & MacWhinney (2018), who found that cognitive linguistics–inspired instruction (i.e., schematic diagram feedback) demonstrated a superiority effect over traditional instruction (i.e., rule and exemplar feedback or corrective feedback) on the translation test but not the cloze test. While the original study adopted the null hypothesis testing approach, the current
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Validation crisitunity Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-13
W. L. Quint Oga-BaldwinAl-Hoorie et al. (2024: Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 1–23) illuminate a validation crisis within the second language (L2) Motivational Self System (L2MSS), revealing empirical flaws in its current measurement. Their analysis indicates a persistent lack of discriminant validity among the system’s constructs, issuing a fundamental challenge in distinguishing the concepts. These findings, echoing
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Do they like me?: Exploring the role of metaperception in L1–L2 speaker interaction Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-11
Chaoqun Zheng, Pavel Trofimovich, Rachael Lindberg, Kim McDonough, Masatoshi SatoPeople are frequently concerned about the impressions they make on others (referred to as metaperceptions), but their insights are often inaccurate. Illustrating the phenomenon called the liking gap, speakers interacting in their first language (L1) and second language (L2) tend to underestimate how much they are liked by their interlocutor, and these judgments often predict their desire to engage
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Learning without awareness revisited and reconsidered: A conceptual replication and extension Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-07
John N. Williams, Yuyan XueIs it possible to acquire a sensitivity to a regularity in language without intending to and without awareness of what it is? In this conceptual replication and extension of an earlier study (Williams, 2005) participants were trained on a semiartificial language in which determiner choice was dependent on noun animacy. Participants who did not report awareness or recognition of this rule were nevertheless
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Exploring the roles of ideal L2 writing self, growth L2 writing mindset, and L2 writing grit in L2 writing achievement among EFL learners Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-05
Jalil Fathi, Mirosław Pawlak, S. Yahya HejaziConsidering the undeniable importance of examining the role of domain- and skill-specific individual difference factors in second-language (L2) writing research, this study examined the possible roles of English-as-a-foreign-language (EFL) learners’ ideal L2 writing self and growth L2 writing mindset in their L2 writing grit, which may in turn contribute to their L2 writing achievement (WA). Data were
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Do reading times predict word learning? An eye–tracking study with novel words Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-04
Irina Elgort, Elisabeth (Lisi) BeyersmannTheories of learning and attention predict a positive relationship between reading times on unfamiliar words and their learning; however, empirical findings of contextual learning studies range from a strong positive relationship to no relationship. To test the conjecture that longer reading times may reflect different cognitive and metacognitive processes, the need to infer novel word meanings from
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Second language knowledge can influence native language performance in exclusively native contexts: An approximate replication of Van Hell & Dijkstra (2002) Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-04
Eric Pelzl, Rafał Jończyk, Janet G. van HellOver the past decades, bilingualism researchers have come to a consensus around a fairly strong view of nonselectivity in bilingual speakers, often citing Van Hell and Dijkstra (2002) as a critical piece of support for this position. Given the study’s continuing relevance to bilingualism and its strong test of the influence of a bilingual’s second language on their first language, we conducted an approximate
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Differential effects of identification and discrimination training tasks on L2 vowel identification and discrimination Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-01
Juli Cebrian, Núria Gavaldà, Celia Gorba, Angélica CarletHigh variability phonetic training using perceptual tasks such as identification and discrimination tasks has often been reported to improve L2 perception. However, studies comparing the efficacy of different tasks on different measures are rare. Forty-four Catalan/Spanish bilingual learners of English were trained with identification or categorical discrimination tasks and were tested on both measures
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Is L2 pronunciation affected by increased task complexity in pronunciation-unfocused speaking tasks? Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-10-31
Ingrid Mora-Plaza, Joan C. Mora, Mireia Ortega, Cristina Aliaga-GarciaThis study examines the effects of task complexity on second language (L2) pronunciation accuracy and global pronunciation measures in pronunciation-unfocused tasks and assesses the relationship between acoustic and listener-based pronunciation measures. Eighty-two Catalan/Spanish learners of English performed simple and complex versions of a problem-solving monologic speaking task, for which the oral
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Manufactured crisis Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-10-31
Mostafa Papi, Yasser TeimouriBased on correlational and factorial analysis of data collected from 384 middle and high school students in South Korea, Al–Hoorie et al. (2024) claimed the existence of a discriminant validity crisis within the L2 motivational self-system research tradition and advocated for abandoning research in this area. In this response, we critically examined the evidence presented, re-analyzed their data, and
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Task design, L1 literacy, and second language oracy: A close replication of Tavakoli and Foster (2008) Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-10-31
Jonathon Ryan, Pauline Foster, Yi Wang, Anthea Fester, Jia Rong YapThis paper reports a replication of part of Tavakoli and Foster’s (2008) investigation into the influence of narrative task design on second language (L2) oral performance. The initial study found in part that narratives with both foreground and background information elicited significantly greater syntactic complexity than those with only foreground information. This close replication adds the variable
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Lexical coverage in L1 and L2 viewing comprehension Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-10-23
Marion Durbahn, Michael Rodgers, Marijana Macis, Elke PetersThis study aimed to investigate the relationship between lexical coverage and TV viewing comprehension. Previous studies have indicated that 95% to 98% of lexical coverage may be needed for reading comprehension (Hu & Nation, 2000). To understand informal listening passages, lower coverage figures (95%-90%) may suffice. However, no study has researched the lexical coverage needed to understand audiovisual
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Explicit information and working memory in second-language acquisition of the Spanish subjunctive: A replication and extension of Fernández (2008) Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-10-16
Nick Henry, Briana Villegas, Kara Morgan-ShortAn important issue in second-language acquisition concerns the role of explicit information (EI) and how it is affected by individual differences. The present study explored this question through a partial replication and extension of Fernández (2008: Experiment 2), which investigated the effects of EI in processing instruction (PI) for the Spanish present subjunctive. This replication compared training
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Structural priming facilitates L2 learning of the dative alternation in Mandarin Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-09-18
Yanxin (Alice) Zhu, Theres GrüterThis study investigated whether structural priming, as a reflection of error-driven learning mechanisms, could facilitate second language (L2) learning of the dative alternation in Mandarin. We sought evidence of learning from both priming and acceptability judgment data. Participants were 25 native speakers and 41 classroom learners (CLs). After a priming session in which participants predicted and
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Task-generated processes in second language speech production: Exploring the neural correlates of task complexity during silent pauses Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-09-18
Andrea Révész, Hyeonjeong Jeong, Shungo Suzuki, Haining Cui, Shunsui Matsuura, Kazuya Saito, Motoaki SugiuraThe last three decades have seen significant development in understanding and describing the effects of task complexity on learner internal processes. However, researchers have primarily employed behavioral methods to investigate task-generated cognitive load. Being the first to adopt neuroimaging to study second language (L2) task effects, we aimed to provide novel insights into the neural correlates
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Explicit information and practice type can affect the L2 acquisition of plural marking: Empirical insights from web-based contrastive instruction Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-09-16
Matt LucasPrevious research has indicated that explicit information (EI) about either the first language (L1) or second language (L2) along with task-essential practice can facilitate L2 learning (e.g., Fernández, 2008; McManus, 2022). However, little research has examined L1–L2 contrastive EI with L1/L2 practice. Targeting plural-marking accuracy, the present study sought to fill this gap by exposing 127 Japanese
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Bilingualism and flexibility in task switching: A close replication study Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-05-23
Rebecca Ward, Justin AwaniThis study aimed to closely replicate Wiseheart et al. (Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 19(1), 141–146, 2016) by investigating the transferability of language-switching skills to nonlinguistic task switching. Current evidence is mixed and there is a need to conduct robust replications in this area. Bilingual (n = 31) and monolingual (n = 47) young adults characterized stimuli by either colour
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Acceptance and engagement patterns of mobile-assisted language learning among non-conventional adult L2 learners: A survival analysis Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-05-22
Hyun-Bin Hwang, Matthew D. Coss, Shawn Loewen, Kaitlyn M. TagarelliResearch on mobile-assisted language learning (MALL) has revealed that high rates of attrition among users can undermine the potential benefits of this learning method. To explore this issue, we surveyed 3,670 adult MALL users based on the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) and also conducted an in-depth analysis of their historical app usage data. The results of hierarchical
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Coherence and comprehensibility in second language speakers’ academic speaking performance Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-05-20
Aki Tsunemoto, Pavel TrofimovichThis study examined the role of discourse organization in second language (L2) comprehensibility ratings. Twelve English for Academic Purposes teachers listened to 60 L2 speech samples elicited through a TOEFL–type integrated speaking task, evaluating each sample for comprehensibility and coherence (perceived interconnectedness of ideas). The samples were analyzed for the occurrence of discourse features
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The interplay of mindsets, aptitude, grit, and language achievement: What role does gender play? Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-05-20
Yasser Teimouri, Somayeh Tahmouresi, Farhad TabandehThe study aimed to examine the interrelationships between growth mindset, L2 aptitude, L2 grit, and L2 achievement, while also exploring the moderating role of gender in these interactions. A sample of 236 English-major students participated in the study by completing a language aptitude test and a questionnaire. The results of path analyses indicated that both aptitude and L2 grit similarly and positively
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Statistical Insignificance is not wholesale transfer in L3 Acquisition: An approximate replication of Rothman (2011) Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-05-13
Kyle ParrishThis study was an approximate replication of Rothman (2011),examining the determiner phrase syntax of a large sample (n = 211) of L3 learners of Portuguese who spoke English and Spanish. Rothman (2011) investigated whether L3 Italian or Brazilian Portuguese speakers are differently impacted by another known Romance Language, if it was their L1 or L2. The original study concluded that groups did not
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How well are primary and secondary meanings of L2 words acquired? Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-05-09
Beatriz González-Fernández, Stuart WebbMost words in a language have more than one meaning. Yet, few studies have explicitly examined the acquisition of secondary meanings of L2 words and the extent to which polysemy and homonymy affect vocabulary learning. This study explores the effect of polysemy and homonymy on the deliberate acquisition of the form–meaning connections of L2 words. Thirty-six EFL learners (compared with a control group
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L2 language development in oral and written modalities Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-05-08
Myeongeun SonThis study investigates whether second language (L2) learners’ language development and accuracy in production are comparable across oral and written modalities on the basis of Pienemann’s processability theory (PT). Eighty-seven English as a Foreign Language (EFL) learners, from high beginner to advanced levels, completed comparable speaking and writing tasks designed to elicit particular morphosyntactic
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Feeling signs: Motor encoding enhances sign language learning in hearing adults Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-04-29
Laura M. Morett, Mathew Cieśla, Mary E. Bray, Karen EmmoreyManual production enhances learning and recall of signs by hearing second language learners; however, the mechanisms enabling this effect are unclear. We examined whether the motor encoding (somatosensory feedback) that occurs during sign production benefits learning and whether it interacts with sign iconicity, which also enhances learning. American Sign Language (ASL) signs varying in iconicity were
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The effects of distributed practice on second language fluency development Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-04-22
Joe Kakitani, Judit KormosThis study examined the effects of distributed practice on second language (L2) speech fluency development. A total of 116 Japanese L2 learners of English were randomly divided into experimental or control conditions. Learners assigned to the experimental groups engaged in four fluency training sessions either in a short-spaced (1-day interval) or long-spaced (7-day interval) condition. Although different
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Development of verb argument constructions in L2 English learners: A close replication of research question 3 in Römer and Berger (2019) Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-04-05
Yingying Liu, Xiaofei LuThis study closely replicates the analyses of the third research question in Römer and Berger (2019), which reported that the associations between verbs and verb argument constructions (VACs) used by German and Spanish learners of English move closer to a native usage norm as the learners’ proficiency increases. This study conducted the same correlation analyses from the original study but with a substantially
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Robust evidence for the simple view of second language reading: Secondary meta-analysis of Jeon and Yamashita (2022) Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-04-04
Akira Hamada, Haruka Shimizu, Yuko Hoshino, Shuichi Takaki, Yuji UshiroThis paper reports a complete secondary analysis of Jeon and Yamashita’s (2022) systematic review to build the second language (L2) model of the simple view of reading (SVR). The same meta-analytic methodologies were maintained, with the exception of applying meta-analytic structural equation modeling (MASEM). This study successfully replicated some of the aggregated correlations but not others, owing
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Clarifying the role of inhibitory control in L2 phonological processing: A preregistered, close replication of Darcy et al. (2016) Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-04-04
Amanda HuenschDarcy et al. (2016) examined the relationship between language abilities and general cognition, or specifically, how inhibitory control might relate to L2 speech perception and production. Given that their findings unexpectedly indicated a stronger relationship between inhibitory control and perception in comparison to inhibitory control and production, and because inhibitory control was measured using
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The interpretation of verbal moods in Spanish: A close replication of Kanwit and Geeslin (2014) Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-04-02
Aarnes Gudmestad, Amanda Edmonds, Carlos Henderson, Christina LindqvistThis study is a close replication of Kanwit and Geeslin (2014), a variationist investigation of the interpretation of verbal moods in adverbial clauses in Spanish. Whereas the first language (L1) of the second-language participants in the initial study was English, we explore whether Kanwit and Geeslin’s results extend to other L1 populations—Swedish and French learners of Spanish. Participants in
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A comparison of lab- and web-based elicited imitation: Insights from explicit-implicit L2 grammar knowledge and L2 proficiency Stud. Second Lang. Acquis. (IF 4.2) Pub Date : 2024-04-01
Kathy Minhye Kim, Xiaoyi Liu, Daniel R. Isbell, Xiaobin ChenElicited imitation (EI) tasks are a practical tool for measuring second language (L2) knowledge and skills. In this study, we implemented a web-based EI task that measures English morphosyntactic knowledge and compared its measurement properties to a traditional laboratory-based EI. A cohort of 149 L2 English learners engaged in the web-based EI task, and 151 participants completed a traditional lab-based