Date of Archiving
2020Archive
Radboud Data Repository
Data archive handle
Publication type
Dataset
Access level
Restricted access
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Organization
SW OZ DCC PL
PI Group Neurobiology of Language
Audience(s)
Life sciences
Languages used
English
Key words
correct input; syntactic processing; P600; Second language; gender agreementAbstract
In three ERP experiments, we investigated how experienced L2 speakers process natural and correct syntactic input that deviates from their own, sometimes incorrect, syntactic representations. Our previous study (Lemhöfer, Schriefers, & Indefrey, 2014) had shown that L2 speakers do engage in native-like syntactic processing of gender agreement, but base this processing on their own idiosyncratic (and sometimes incorrect) grammars. However, as in other standard ERP studies, but different from realistic L2 input, the materials in that study contained a large proportion of incorrect sentences. In the present study, German speakers of Dutch read exclusively objectively correct Dutch sentences that did or did not contain subjective determiner ‘errors’ (e.g., de boot ‘the boat’, which conflicts with the intuition of many German speakers that the correct phrase should be het boot). During reading for comprehension (Experiment 1), no syntax-related ERP responses for subjectively incorrect compared to correct phrases were observed. The same was true even when participants explicitly attended to and learned from the determiners in the sentences (Experiment 2). Only when participants judged the correctness of determiners in each sentence (Experiment 3), a clear P600 appeared. These results suggest that the full and native-like use of subjective grammars, as reflected in the P600 to subjective violations, occurs only when speakers have reason to mistrust the grammaticality of the input, either because of the nature of the task (grammaticality judgments), or because of the salient presence of incorrect sentences.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Datasets [1912]
- Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging [4040]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [30494]