Philippe Prévost’s research while affiliated with Université Laval and other places

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Publications (2)


Missing Surface Inflection or Impairment in Second Language Acquisition? Evidence from Tense and Agreement
  • Article

April 2000

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564 Reads

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713 Citations

Second language Research

Philippe Prévost

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In this article, two accounts of the variable use of inflection in adult second language (L2) acquisition are examined. The Missing Surface Inflection Hypothesis (MSIH) proposes that L2 learners have unconscious knowledge of the functional projections and features underlying tense and agreement. However, learners sometimes have a problem with realization of surface morphology, such that they resort to non-finite forms (e.g. Haznedar and Schwartz, 1997; Prévost and White, 1999). The Impaired Representation Hypothesis (IRH) claims that L2 inflection is essentially impaired, due to lack of functional categories, features or feature strength (e.g. Eubank, 1993/94; Meisel, 1997). These views make different predictions for adult L2 acquisition. Spontaneous production data from two adult learners of French and two adult learners of German are examined. The data show that finite forms do not occur in non-finite contexts, that learners exhibit syntactic reflexes of finiteness and that inflected forms largely show accurate agreement. These results suggest that adult L2 learners represent finiteness and agreement at an abstract level, rather than being impaired in this domain, supporting the MSIH.


Citations (1)


... A handful of studies reported the influence of the L1 gender system on predictive L2 gender processing (e.g., Foucart & Frenck-Mestre, 2011;Lemmerth & Hopp, 2019;Paolieri et al., 2010;Sabourin & Stowe, 2008). Relatively, the influence of the knowledge of L2 lexical gender on predictive L2 gender processing has received more attention (see Clahsen & Felser, 2006;Grüter et al., 2012;Hopp, 2010Hopp, , 2013Hopp, , 2016Hopp, , 2018Prévost & White, 2000). Hence, most processing-based models of L2 predictive gender processing relied on individual differences associated with knowledge of lexical gender (see Clashen & Felser, 2006). ...

Reference:

The role of differential cross-linguistic influence and other constraints in predictive L2 gender processing
Missing Surface Inflection or Impairment in Second Language Acquisition? Evidence from Tense and Agreement
  • Citing Article
  • April 2000

Second language Research