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What variables condition syntactic transfer?: A look at the l3 initial state

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What variables condition syntactic transfer? A look at the l3 initial state. / Rothman, Jason; Amaro, Jennifer.
In: Second Language Research, Vol. 26, No. 2, 30.04.2010, p. 189-218.

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Rothman J, Amaro J. What variables condition syntactic transfer? A look at the l3 initial state. Second Language Research. 2010 Apr 30;26(2):189-218. doi: 10.1177/0267658309349410

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Rothman, Jason ; Amaro, Jennifer. / What variables condition syntactic transfer? A look at the l3 initial state. In: Second Language Research. 2010 ; Vol. 26, No. 2. pp. 189-218.

Bibtex

@article{80175455a4a349eaaa03e29a053456cd,
title = "What variables condition syntactic transfer?: A look at the l3 initial state",
abstract = "This study investigates transfer at the third-language (L3) initial state, testing between the following possibilities: (1) the first language (L1) transfer hypothesis (an L1 effect for all adult acquisition), (2) the second language (L2) transfer hypothesis, where the L2 blocks L1 transfer (often referred to in the recent literature as the 'L2 status factor'; Williams and Hammarberg, 1998), and (3) the Cumulative Enhancement Model (Flynn et al., 2004), which proposes selective transfer from all previous linguistic knowledge. We provide data from successful English-speaking learners of L2 Spanish at the initial state of acquiring L3 French and L3 Italian relating to properties of the Null-Subject Parameter (e.g. Chomsky, 1981; Rizzi, 1982). We compare these groups to each other, as well as to groups of English learners of L2 French and L2 Italian at the initial state, and conclude that the data are consistent with the predictions of the 'L2 status factor'. However, we discuss an alternative possible interpretation based on (psycho)typologically-motivated transfer (borrowing from Kellerman, 1983), providing a methodology for future research in this domain to meaningfully tease apart the 'L2 status factor' from this alternative account.",
keywords = "Crosslinguistic influence, L2 Spanish, L3 French, L3 Italian, Null-subject parameter, Psychotypology",
author = "Jason Rothman and Jennifer Amaro",
year = "2010",
month = apr,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1177/0267658309349410",
language = "English",
volume = "26",
pages = "189--218",
journal = "Second Language Research",
issn = "0267-6583",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - What variables condition syntactic transfer?

T2 - A look at the l3 initial state

AU - Rothman, Jason

AU - Amaro, Jennifer

PY - 2010/4/30

Y1 - 2010/4/30

N2 - This study investigates transfer at the third-language (L3) initial state, testing between the following possibilities: (1) the first language (L1) transfer hypothesis (an L1 effect for all adult acquisition), (2) the second language (L2) transfer hypothesis, where the L2 blocks L1 transfer (often referred to in the recent literature as the 'L2 status factor'; Williams and Hammarberg, 1998), and (3) the Cumulative Enhancement Model (Flynn et al., 2004), which proposes selective transfer from all previous linguistic knowledge. We provide data from successful English-speaking learners of L2 Spanish at the initial state of acquiring L3 French and L3 Italian relating to properties of the Null-Subject Parameter (e.g. Chomsky, 1981; Rizzi, 1982). We compare these groups to each other, as well as to groups of English learners of L2 French and L2 Italian at the initial state, and conclude that the data are consistent with the predictions of the 'L2 status factor'. However, we discuss an alternative possible interpretation based on (psycho)typologically-motivated transfer (borrowing from Kellerman, 1983), providing a methodology for future research in this domain to meaningfully tease apart the 'L2 status factor' from this alternative account.

AB - This study investigates transfer at the third-language (L3) initial state, testing between the following possibilities: (1) the first language (L1) transfer hypothesis (an L1 effect for all adult acquisition), (2) the second language (L2) transfer hypothesis, where the L2 blocks L1 transfer (often referred to in the recent literature as the 'L2 status factor'; Williams and Hammarberg, 1998), and (3) the Cumulative Enhancement Model (Flynn et al., 2004), which proposes selective transfer from all previous linguistic knowledge. We provide data from successful English-speaking learners of L2 Spanish at the initial state of acquiring L3 French and L3 Italian relating to properties of the Null-Subject Parameter (e.g. Chomsky, 1981; Rizzi, 1982). We compare these groups to each other, as well as to groups of English learners of L2 French and L2 Italian at the initial state, and conclude that the data are consistent with the predictions of the 'L2 status factor'. However, we discuss an alternative possible interpretation based on (psycho)typologically-motivated transfer (borrowing from Kellerman, 1983), providing a methodology for future research in this domain to meaningfully tease apart the 'L2 status factor' from this alternative account.

KW - Crosslinguistic influence

KW - L2 Spanish

KW - L3 French

KW - L3 Italian

KW - Null-subject parameter

KW - Psychotypology

U2 - 10.1177/0267658309349410

DO - 10.1177/0267658309349410

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:77953050326

VL - 26

SP - 189

EP - 218

JO - Second Language Research

JF - Second Language Research

SN - 0267-6583

IS - 2

ER -