Advanced learners’ comprehension of discourse connectives: The role of L1 transfer across on-line and off-line tasks

Publication date

2015

Authors

Zufferey, SandrineISNI 0000000104386121
Mak, PimISNI 0000000043126309
Degand, Liesbeth
Sanders, T.J.M.ORCID 0000-0001-8212-7336ISNI 0000000107870699

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

Discourse connectives are important indicators of textual coherence, and mastering them is an essential part of acquiring a language. In this article, we compare advanced learners’ sensitivity to the meaning conveyed by connectives in an off-line grammaticality judgment task and an on-line reading experiment using eye-tracking. We also assess the influence of first language (L1) transfer by comparing learners’ comprehension of two non-native-like semantic uses of connectives in English, often produced by learners due to transfer from French and Dutch. Our results indicate that in an off-line task transfer is an important factor accounting for French- and Dutch-speaking learners’ non-native-like comprehension of connectives. During on-line processing, however, learners are as sensitive as native speakers to the meaning conveyed by connectives. These results raise intriguing questions regarding explicit vs. implicit knowledge in language learners

Keywords

discourse connectives, eye-tracking, English as a foreign language, grammaticality judgments, transfer, Taverne

Citation

Zufferey, S, Mak, P, Degand, L & Sanders, T 2015, 'Advanced learners’ comprehension of discourse connectives: The role of L1 transfer across on-line and off-line tasks', Second Language Research, pp. 1-23. https://doi.org/10.1177/0267658315573349