Abstract

1. Acknowledgements 2. Introduction: Cognitive processing in second language acquisition (by Putz, Martin) 3. I. Cognitive theoretical foundations of language and learning 4. 1. Concept stretching and model merging: An attempt to better account for L2 processing and acquisition of grammatical constructions (by Seilhamer, Mark Fifer) 5. 2. Construction learning as category learning (by Ellis, Nick C.) 6. 3. The role of relevance theory in SLA studies (by Jodlowiec, Maria) 7. 4. Distinct mechanisms in the processing of English past tense morphology: A view from L2 processing (by Kirkici, Bilal) 8. 5. Third language acquisition, macrocategories and synonymy (by Filatova, Ksenya) 9. II. Mental processes and acquisition procedures followed by language learners 10. 6. First exposure: Converting target language input to intake (by Rast, Rebekah) 11. 7. On the stability of representations in the multilingual lexicon (by Bot, Kees de) 12. 8. Conceptual representations in the multilingual mind: A study of advanced Dutch students of English (by Lowie, Wander) 13. 9. Formulaic language in L2: Storage, retrieval and production of idioms by second language learners (by Cieslicka, Anna) 14. 10. A procedure for testing the Noticing Hypothesis in the context of vocabulary acquisition (by Godfroid, Aline) 15. 11. Construal and the use of impersonalisation strategies in English and Spanish in an FLL context (by Marin Arrese, Juana Isabel) 16. 12. Inside the attriter's mind: A comparative exploration of the cognitive constraints in Dutch L1 attrition in an L2 English environment and advanced Dutch L1 acquisition (by Keijzer, Merel C.J.) 17. III. Cognitive language pedagogy: Classroom studies with applications for teaching 18. 13. Situating and distributing cognition across task demands: The SSARC model of pedagogic task sequencing (by Robinson, Peter) 19. 14. Typology in the L2 classroom: Second language acquisition from a typological perspective (by Filipovic, Luna) 20. 15. Metaphoric competence in the first and second language: Similarities and differences (by Littlemore, Jeannette) 21. 16. Figurative competence is better developed in L1 than in L2, or is it?: Understanding conversational implicatures in L1 and L2 (by Bromberek-Dyzman, Katarzyna) 22. 17. Attention to phonological form: Modified output in task-based negotiated interaction (by Sicola, Laura) 23. 18. Quality and type of corrective feedback, noticing, and learner uptake in synchronous computer-mediated text-based and voice chats (by Sotillo, Susana M.) 24. Index

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