Abstract

Having a proper insight into understanding the human cognition in sentence processing strategies, this study explored the nature of Minimal Attachment and Late Closure strategies in relation to language proficiency levels. Facing the problem that why some EFL learners tend to parse differently (i.e., use Minimal Attachment and Late Closure Strategies), on one hand and the need to develop a reliable and valid instrument to do the respective investigation on the other hand, was the motive behind this study. By administering a Preliminary English Test (PET), three groups of Iranian adult EFL learners, both male and female were conventionally classified into three levels of proficiency. Three separate researcher-made sentence comprehension tests (each for one proficiency level) were then adopted as the main data collecting instruments through applying Think- Aloud Protocol in which all steps of instrument validation were taken. Findings revealed the use or better to say construct validity of various strategies. Meanwhile, the analyses revealed that the parsing strategies are, to some extent if not that much, associated with language proficiency levels, indicating that language proficiency level has some degree of effect on the participants use of parsing strategies as a whole, although findings on Minimal Attachment and Late Closure strategy use as two separate ones differed. While, there was not much effect of language proficiency level on Minimal Attachment strategy, the findings indicated a moderately large effect size on Late Closure strategy use and the three groups showed almost higher means on Late Closure strategy rather than the other one. Therefore, certain parsing strategies are associated with language proficiency level proving the fact that language proficiency level is an effective parameter as far as human cognition in language processing in general and sentence processing in particular are concerned. Moreover, not only is there relationship among language proficiency levels and the strategy use but the nature of relationship varies depending on language proficiency level and strategy type.

Highlights

  • Language perception is primarily known with oral modality in which listeners are just going to categorize the sounds into classes during this temporal aspect of language

  • In order to investigate whether parsing strategies (i.e., Minimal Attachment strategy and Late Closure strategy) have psychological reality, the valuation process of the construct of parsing which included content and construct validations along with reliability estimation was run

  • The data and the number of the extracted factors on one hand, and the test score consistency realized in the form of reliability indices on the other hand, support the validity of the construct of sentence processing done through parsing strategies

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Summary

Introduction

Language perception is primarily known with oral modality in which listeners are just going to categorize the sounds into classes during this temporal aspect of language. A number of terms such as perception, understanding, recognition, and interpretation are used in corporation with comprehension. Garman (1990) defines the usage of each term including, “perception, usually reserved for the initial processing of input; understanding, the end product; recognition, which implies a stored memory element; and interpretation, which suggests a creative process going beyond the strict properties of the signal” Garnham (1985) cited in Scovel (2001), takes a different opinion and proposes sub-processes of language comprehension as word recognition, parsing, semantic interpretation, model construction, and pragmatic interpretation

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