Abstract

The present study used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to investigate how Spanish adult learners of Basque respond to morphosyntactic violations after a short period of training on a small fragment of Basque grammar. Participants (n = 17) were exposed to violation and control phrases in three phases (pretest, training, generalization-test). In each phase participants listened to short Basque phrases and they judged whether they were correct or incorrect. During the pre-test and generalization-test, participants did not receive any feedback. During the training blocks feedback was provided after each response. We also ran two Spanish control blocks before and after training. We analyzed the event-related magnetic- field (ERF) recorded in response to a critical word during all three phases. In the pretest, classification was below chance and we found no electrophysiological differences between violation and control stimuli. Then participants were explicitly taught a Basque grammar rule. From the first training block participants were able to correctly classify control and violation stimuli and an evoked violation response was present. Although the timing of the electrophysiological responses matched participants' L1 effect, the effect size was smaller for L2 and the topographical distribution differed from the L1. While the L1 effect was bilaterally distributed on the auditory sensors, the L2 effect was present at right frontal sensors. During training blocks two and three, the violation-control effect size increased and the topography evolved to a more L1-like pattern. Moreover, this pattern was maintained in the generalization test. We conclude that rapid changes in neuronal responses can be observed in adult learners of a simple morphosyntactic rule, and that native-like responses can be achieved at least in small fragments of second language.

Highlights

  • In research on second language acquisition (SLA), adult grammar learning has been characterized as a difficult or uncertain process (Weber-Fox and Neville, 1996), but work within the last decade has shown that for some groups of adult language learners, high levels of grammatical proficiency can be achieved in limited domains relatively quickly and effectively in focused learning tasks, and that there are corresponding changes in the electrophysiological response that approximate those of adult first language (L1) responses in similar tasks

  • This study was designed to focus on the learning process of a grammar rule and not on this particular issue, so we are not in a position to confidently opt for one or the other explanation. It would be nice if a second Spanish is run after a break to have a better picture of the story. Based on both the behavioral results and the electrophysiological responses, we found that when a grammar rule is taught individually in an intensive training paradigm, learning can occur rapidly and it is usually accompanied by changes in neural responses that are similar to L1-like patterns, as it has been shown in previous studies (Mueller et al, 2005, 2007, 2008; Davidson and Indefrey, 2009a,b, 2011)

  • Some other studies that compared native speakers and adults learners did show native-like patterns in adult learners (Kotz et al, 2008)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In research on second language acquisition (SLA), adult grammar learning has been characterized as a difficult or uncertain process (Weber-Fox and Neville, 1996), but work within the last decade has shown that for some groups of adult language learners, high levels of grammatical proficiency can be achieved in limited domains relatively quickly and effectively in focused learning tasks, and that there are corresponding changes in the electrophysiological response that approximate those of adult first language (L1) responses in similar tasks (see Caffarra et al, 2015, for a recent review). Regarding magnetoencephalography (MEG) studies on the field, Davidson and Indefrey (2009b) examined grammar learning on adult learners of Dutch, the source reconstruction localized the evoked activity at left temporal and left inferior-frontal areas. In the present work we report a source reconstruction of evoked brain activity recorded using MEG before, during and after a few hours of grammar learning in adult Spanish [Spanish (SP), L1] learners of Basque [Basque (BQ), L2] with the goal of better characterizing the areas involved in the ability to recognize grammatical constraints. More recently there has been a shift in focus to characterizing how proficiency evolves over time during learning and development

Objectives
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call