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Aging and Nativelikeness in Second Language Acquisition

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Title: Aging and Nativelikeness in Second Language Acquisition


1
Aging and Nativelikeness in Second Language
Acquisition
  • TuBBS
  • June 28, 2004
  • David Birdsong
  • University of Texas
  • birdsong_at_ccwf.cc.utexas.edu

2
Session 1Common Misconceptions About Age and
L2A
3
Common Misconceptions About Age and L2A
  • Age effects are critical period effects.
  • Age effects are maturational in nature.
  • Age effects are only biological in nature.
  • There is nothing you can do about age effects.

4
More Misconceptions
  • (5) Nativelike attainment is rare to
    nonexistent.
  • (6) Nativelike attainment requires special
    talent.
  • Nativelikeness is restricted to narrow domains of
    performance.
  • Among postpubertal learners at L2A end state

5
Age Effects in L2A
  • Age of acquisition predicts level of ultimate
    attainment. BUT
  • (1) Age effects are not bounded, i.e., they are
    not confined to a (critical) period.

6
Age Effects in L2A
  • Age of acquisition predicts level of ultimate
    attainment. BUT
  • (1) Age effects are not bounded, i.e., they are
    not confined to a (critical) period.
  • (2) Age effects are not maturational in nature.

7
Age Effects in L2A
  • Age of acquisition predicts level of ultimate
    attainment. BUT
  • (1) Age effects are not bounded, i.e., they are
    not confined to a (critical) period.
  • (2) Age effects are not maturational in nature.
  • (3) Age-related effects are not uniquely
    biological in nature.

8
Age Effects in L2A
  • Age of acquisition predicts level of ultimate
    attainment. BUT
  • (1) Age effects are not bounded, i.e., they are
    not confined to a (critical) period.
  • (2) Age effects are not maturational in nature.
  • (3) Age-related effects are not uniquely
    biological in nature.
  • (4) Age effects can be moderated.

9
Maturationally-Based Critical PeriodGeometric
and Temporal Features
  • 1 peak sensitivity 2 beginning of offset
  • 3 end of offset 4 baseline
    sensitivity
  • gt 3 coincides with end of maturation
  • gt Age effects do not persist past 3

1
2
STRETCHED Z (Johnson Newport, 1989) (Pinker,
1994)
4
3
10
Johnson Newport (1989, p. 79)
  • If the explanation for late learners poorer
    performance relates to maturation, performance
    should not continue to decline over age, for
    presumably there are not many important
    maturational differences between, for example,
    the brain of a 17-year old and the brain of a
    27-year old. Instead, there should be a
    consistent decline of performance of age for
    those exposed to the language before puberty, but
    no systematic relationship to age of exposure,
    and a leveling off of ultimate performance, among
    those exposed to the language after puberty.

11
STRETCHED Z (Newport, 1991)
12
JN89 Early vs. Late AoA
13
Observed Age Effects in L2A 1
14
Observed Age Effects in L2A 2
15
Observed Age Effects in L2A 3
16
Flege, Munro, MacKay (1995)
17
(1 2) Generalization L2A age effects persist
over the span of AoA
  • Observed unbounded age effects ? period. The
    CP construct is a poor fit for the data.
  • Observed postmaturational effects ? maturational
    effects. Age effects are not (just) maturational
    in nature.

18
(1 2) Generalization L2A age effects persist
over the span of AoA
  • EXPLANATIONS?
  • gt maturation
  • maturational effects early on
  • general age effects later on
  • gt progressive entrenchment of L1
    representationsgt inhibition of L2 reps
    interference with L2 processing
  • gt biographical factors covarying with age
  • gt neurocognitive aging

19
Age vs. maturation
  • Age and maturation differ in the timing and
    geometry of their effects.
  • Maturation and aging are distinct mechanisms.
    Merck Manual of Geriatrics Aging is a
    biological process maturation is a result of,
    and discrete phase within, that process.

20
Shallow age function
21
Steep age function
22
(3) Age-related effects are not uniquely
biological in nature. (Some age effects are
biological, others arent.)
  • Consider first Biologically-based age effects
    in temporal-associative areas of the brain

23
Age associative memory
  • HISTOLOGICAL Cellular features of normal aging
    are concentrated in neural regions implicated in
    associative memory (Scheibel, 1996)
  • Neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) - found in
    hippocampus temporal
  • association areas
  • Amyloid plaques - found in hippocampus
    2nd/3rd layers of temporal / associative cortex

24
NFTs (black) Plaques (brown)
25
Age associative memory
  • HORMONAL Stress / Age-related elevation of
    cortisol levels gt hippocampal atrophy, impairing
    learning memory function (Lupien et al., 1998
    Newcomer et al., 1999).
  • HORMONAL Estrogen enhances verbal memory
    function in associative areas (Maki et al., 2001
    Miles et al., 1998) females gt males on verbal
    memory tasks (Halpern, 2000 Kimura, 1999).
    Estrogen levels generally decline with age.

26
Non-biological factorsaffecting the age function
  • L1/L2 Pairing Typological proximity gt
    facilitation in syntax (parameter resetting)
    inhibition in accent (segmental level).
    Interplay with biographical factors?

27
JN (1989) vs. BM (2001)
28
Non-biological factorsaffecting the age function
  • L1/L2 Pairing Typological proximity gt
    facilitation in syntax (parameter resetting)
    inhibition in accent (segmental level).
    Interplay with biographical factors?
  • Input/Interaction Use of L2 predicts accent
    also knowledge of lexical /grammatical
    idiosyncrasies.

29
Non-biological factorsaffecting the age function
  • L1/L2 Pairing Typological proximity gt
    facilitation in syntax (parameter resetting)
    inhibition in accent (segmental level).
    Interplay with biographical factors?
  • Input/Interaction Use of L2 predicts accent
    also knowledge of lexical /grammatical
    idiosyncrasies.
  • Training In most studies, years of FL schooling
    age of 1st schooling do not predict level of
    end state proficiency. However, training may be
    a necessary condition for nativelikeness.

30
(4) Moderating the effects of age
  • Biographical
  • L2 input/interaction
  • L2 training
  • Lifestyle (nutrition, exercise, smoking,
    alcohol)
  • Relevant cognitive experiences
  • Biological
  • Health (blood pressure, cortisol levels)
  • Hormones (estrogen levels)

31
(No Transcript)
32
Cotman (2000)
33
Age Effects in L2ASUMMARY
  • Age of acquisition predicts level of ultimate
    attainment. BUT
  • (1) Age effects are not bounded, i.e., are not
    confined to a (critical) period.
  • (2) Age effects are not maturational in nature.
  • (3) Age-related effects are not uniquely
    biological in nature.
  • (4) Age effects can be blunted.

34
AsideMy friend (spouse, case study subject,
etc.) has been immersed in the L2 for 15 years
and still has non-native pronunciation (lexis,
AGR, etc.). Obviously youre wrong about the
moderating role of L2 use (phonetic training,
psycho-social factors, etc.)!
35
Results clearly suggest that factors like
professional motivation, integrative motivation
or strength of concern for L2 pronunciation
accuracy do not automatically lead to accent-free
L2 speech (Piske et al., 2001, p. 202)
36
My friend (spouse, case study subject, etc.) has
been immersed in the L2 for 15 years and still
has non-native pronunciation (lexis, AGR, etc.).
Obviously youre wrong about the moderating role
of L2 use (phonetic training, psycho-social
factors, etc.)!Distinction
Necessary vs. sufficient conditions
37
Nativelike attainment in late L2A
  • Studies of end state in post-pubertal L2A reveal
  • (5) Nativelike attainment is not rare.

38
Nativelike attainment in late L2A
  • Studies of end state in post-pubertal L2A reveal
  • (5) Nativelike attainment is not rare.
  • (6) Nativelike attainment does not require
    extraordinary talent.

39
Nativelike attainment in late L2A
  • Studies of end state in post-pubertal L2A reveal
  • (5) Nativelike attainment is not rare.
  • (6) Nativelike attainment does not require
    extraordinary talent.
  • (7) Nativelikeness is not always confined to a
    narrow L2 performance domain.

40
Bley-Vroman (1989, p. 44)
  • gt In late L2A, complete success is extremely
    rare, or perhaps even nonexistent
  • 0 to 5 percent rate of nativelike attainment
  • gt Success in late L2A is as pathological as
    failure in L1A.

41
(5) Observed nativelikeness
  • Since 1992, /- 20 experimental
    (psycholinguistic) observations of late L2
    learners performing in the range of native
    controls, or to even more stringent criteria.
  • Segmental global pronunciation, perception,
    morphosyntax, lexis.

42
(5) Rate of nativelikeness not rare
  • In these studies, the incidence of nativelikeness
    is typically between 5 and 20 percent (range 3
    - 33).

43
(6) Talent The Received View
  • Successful learners have talent or aptitude for
    learning language resulting from special
    neurocognitive abilities (Obler)

44
(6) Nativelikeness lt? special talent(Schneiderman
, 1992)
  • Wechsler Memory Quotient
  • California Verbal Learning
  • MLAT I -- number learning
  • MLAT II -- phonetic script
  • MLAT III -- spelling cues
  • MLAT IV -- words in sentences
  • MLAT V -- paired associates
  • MLAT Total
  • Verbal IQ
  • Performance IQ

45
Nativelikeness lt? special neural organization
(Scheiderman, 1992)
  • Successful learners are NOT weakly left
    lateralized (ruling out cognitive flexibility
    in the neural substrate as the source of success
    in postpubertal L2A).

46
(7) Narrow vs. comprehensive nativelikeness
  • Claim Nativelikeness, when observed, is
    restricted to isolated performance domains.
    Absolute nativelike command of an L2 may in fact
    never be possible for any learner (Hyltenstam
    Abrahamsson, 2003, p. 575 see also Long, 1993)

47
Marinova-Todd (2003)
  • 30 late (gt16 YOA) arrivals in U.S.
  • gt 5 years LOR (mean 11 years)
  • Screened for proficiency
  • College educated
  • 30 native controls, comparable ages and education

48
Marinova-Todd (2003)
  • Nine tasks, covering
  • Pronunciation
  • reading aloud a paragraph from a novel
  • telling the Frog Story
  • Morphosyntax
  • (3) GJT from White Genesee (1996)
  • (4) error analysis of Frog Story recounting
  • (5) sentence comprehension test from Dabrowska
    (1997)

49
Marinova-Todd (2003)
  • Nine tasks, covering
  • Lexical knowledge
  • (6) lexical diversity in telling Frog Story
  • (7) Revised Peabody Vocabulary Test
  • Language Use
  • (8) narrative coherence test
  • (9) Discourse Completion Test adapted from
    Blum-Kulka et al. (1999)

50
Marinova-Todd (2003)
  • Results
  • Three of the 30 subjects performed within the
    range of native controls across all 9 tasks
    (above native means in some cases).
  • Six other subjects in native range on 7/9 tasks.

51
Birdsong (2003)
  • 22 late (gt18 YOA) Anglophone arrivals in Paris
    area
  • gt 5 years LOR (mean 11 years)
  • Not screened for proficiency
  • College educated
  • 17 native controls, comparable ages and education

52
Birdsong (2003)
  • Seven tasks, covering
  • Pronunciation
  • VOT for initial consonants (word lists)
  • (2) vowel lengths (word lists)
  • (3) syntactically-conditioned liaisons interdites
    with real and nonce lexis
  • (4) global pronunciation (passage from literary
    text)

53
Birdsong (2003)
  • Seven tasks, covering
  • Morphosyntax GJTs for
  • (5) Null Object Larmée le trouve difficile de
    prévoir les nouvelles attaques de lennemi
  • (6) Exceptional Case Marking Mes profs trouvent
    ces vers etre indignes de Shakespeare
  • (7) Distribution of SE in unaccusatives se
    verdir sempourprer

54
Birdsong (2003)
  • Results
  • Three of 22 subjects performed in native range
    on 6 of 7 tasks.

55
COMPOSITE RESULTS
56
(7) Nativelikeness in L2 is not always confined
to a narrow performance domain.(Marinova-Todd,
2003 Birdsong, 2003)
57
Aside The relevance of nativelikeness in L2A
research
  • Selinker (1972) even suggested that the rare
    cases of apparent complete success could perhaps
    be regarded as peripheral to the enterprise of
    L2A theory
  • (Bley-Vroman, 1989, p. 44)

58
Determining the upper limits of L2A
  • Recognize limits of current theories practices
  • Fill descriptive voids w/r/t outcomes
  • Fill descriptive voids w/r/t factors
  • Relate outcomes and factors to models of
    acquisition and representation

59
GERIATRIC SCIENCE
fitness
disease
wellness
infirmity
BALANCE COMPLETENESS
60
Dont ignore the upper limits
  • Marathon running
  • Fauja Singh
  • 92-year-old marathoner
  • 26.2 miles in 5 hours 40 minutes

61
L2A END STATE STUDY
nativelike
learnable
not learnable
not nativelike
BALANCE COMPLETENESS
62
Dont ignore the upper limits
  • Post-pubertal L2 acquisition
  • Earlier AoA is better, but
  • at L2A end state, 10 perform like natives on
    challenging language tasks.

63
End of Session 1THANK YOU
  • Session 2
  • Nativelikeness in L2A Research
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