Vulnerable language areas in attriting L1 German : testing the interface hypothesis and structural overlap hypothesis

Linguists studying language acquisition often assume that once a first language is fully acquired, its mental linguistic representation remains constant and stable. Observations of native language attrition due to the influence of a dominant second language have led researchers to rethink the nature...

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Main Author: Grabitzky, Vera Katharina
Other Authors: Slabakova, Roumyana
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1328
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5367&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-53672019-10-13T04:44:48Z Vulnerable language areas in attriting L1 German : testing the interface hypothesis and structural overlap hypothesis Grabitzky, Vera Katharina Linguists studying language acquisition often assume that once a first language is fully acquired, its mental linguistic representation remains constant and stable. Observations of native language attrition due to the influence of a dominant second language have led researchers to rethink the nature of the first language and consider the possibility that the mental representation of our first language may not be completely stable. The purpose of this dissertation is to investigate specific areas of the first language that may be particularly vulnerable to L1 attrition if exposed to a dominant L2. I test Sorace's (2003) Vulnerable Interface Hypothesis, and propose and test the Structural Overlap Hypothesis. The Vulnerable Interface Hypothesis for first language attrition claims that linguistic properties located in the interfaces between the linguistic computational system and external domains (e.g. discourse or pragmatics) are particularly vulnerable to attrition, while internal interfaces (e.g. the syntax-semantics interface) are only somewhat vulnerable to attrition. The domain of narrow syntax is assumed to remain stable unless the L1 begins to attrite in childhood (Montrul, 2008). The Structural Overlap Hypothesis assumes that properties which exhibit structural overlap between the L1 and L2 are more vulnerable to L1 attrition. The predictions of both hypotheses are tested using 15 L1 German adult attriters whose dominant L2 is English, in order to observe the degree of stability of the linguistic system in adult onset bilinguals. Four linguistic properties of German are examined, which are grouped in two pairings of a purely syntactic property with a grammatically related interface property. 15 monolingual L1 German speakers and 15 monolingual L1 English speakers serve as controls. The data obtained also shed light on a frequently debated question of attrition research, viz. whether L1 attrition is due to transfer from the L2, or a decrease in the linguistic processing capacity due to competition of a dominant L2, or both. 2014-07-01T07:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1328 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5367&context=etd Copyright 2014 Vera K. Grabitzky Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaSlabakova, Roumyana Applied Linguistics German Interface Hypothesis Language Attrition Second Language Acquisition Syntax First and Second Language Acquisition
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Applied Linguistics
German
Interface Hypothesis
Language Attrition
Second Language Acquisition
Syntax
First and Second Language Acquisition
spellingShingle Applied Linguistics
German
Interface Hypothesis
Language Attrition
Second Language Acquisition
Syntax
First and Second Language Acquisition
Grabitzky, Vera Katharina
Vulnerable language areas in attriting L1 German : testing the interface hypothesis and structural overlap hypothesis
description Linguists studying language acquisition often assume that once a first language is fully acquired, its mental linguistic representation remains constant and stable. Observations of native language attrition due to the influence of a dominant second language have led researchers to rethink the nature of the first language and consider the possibility that the mental representation of our first language may not be completely stable. The purpose of this dissertation is to investigate specific areas of the first language that may be particularly vulnerable to L1 attrition if exposed to a dominant L2. I test Sorace's (2003) Vulnerable Interface Hypothesis, and propose and test the Structural Overlap Hypothesis. The Vulnerable Interface Hypothesis for first language attrition claims that linguistic properties located in the interfaces between the linguistic computational system and external domains (e.g. discourse or pragmatics) are particularly vulnerable to attrition, while internal interfaces (e.g. the syntax-semantics interface) are only somewhat vulnerable to attrition. The domain of narrow syntax is assumed to remain stable unless the L1 begins to attrite in childhood (Montrul, 2008). The Structural Overlap Hypothesis assumes that properties which exhibit structural overlap between the L1 and L2 are more vulnerable to L1 attrition. The predictions of both hypotheses are tested using 15 L1 German adult attriters whose dominant L2 is English, in order to observe the degree of stability of the linguistic system in adult onset bilinguals. Four linguistic properties of German are examined, which are grouped in two pairings of a purely syntactic property with a grammatically related interface property. 15 monolingual L1 German speakers and 15 monolingual L1 English speakers serve as controls. The data obtained also shed light on a frequently debated question of attrition research, viz. whether L1 attrition is due to transfer from the L2, or a decrease in the linguistic processing capacity due to competition of a dominant L2, or both.
author2 Slabakova, Roumyana
author_facet Slabakova, Roumyana
Grabitzky, Vera Katharina
author Grabitzky, Vera Katharina
author_sort Grabitzky, Vera Katharina
title Vulnerable language areas in attriting L1 German : testing the interface hypothesis and structural overlap hypothesis
title_short Vulnerable language areas in attriting L1 German : testing the interface hypothesis and structural overlap hypothesis
title_full Vulnerable language areas in attriting L1 German : testing the interface hypothesis and structural overlap hypothesis
title_fullStr Vulnerable language areas in attriting L1 German : testing the interface hypothesis and structural overlap hypothesis
title_full_unstemmed Vulnerable language areas in attriting L1 German : testing the interface hypothesis and structural overlap hypothesis
title_sort vulnerable language areas in attriting l1 german : testing the interface hypothesis and structural overlap hypothesis
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2014
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1328
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5367&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT grabitzkyverakatharina vulnerablelanguageareasinattritingl1germantestingtheinterfacehypothesisandstructuraloverlaphypothesis
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