Processing trade-offs in non-native learners' performance of narrative tasks

Exploring learners' processes of memory and analysis has captivated considerable attention among language-learning researchers due to the recent prevalence of key concepts from feeder disciplines such as cognitive psychology and phraseology. However, there has been little empirical effort to de...

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Veröffentlicht in:TESL Canada journal 2011-12, Vol.29 (1), p.23
1. Verfasser: Maad, Mohamed Ridha Ben
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description Exploring learners' processes of memory and analysis has captivated considerable attention among language-learning researchers due to the recent prevalence of key concepts from feeder disciplines such as cognitive psychology and phraseology. However, there has been little empirical effort to describe the nature of interaction between these two processing modes. This article reports on a study that was designed (a) to explore the distribution of these two modes of language representation in the oral production of non-native learners of English and (b) to determine whether they shift their processing styles (i.e., lexical retrieval to rule analysis or vice versa) in the face of increasing cognitive load. Thirty Tunisian undergraduate students of English performed three narrative tasks over three tape-recorded episodes. Analysis of the transcribed findings revealed that these participants activated their memory-based system for lexical retrieval at the beginning of their performance when the tasks were not demanding and fell back on the rule-based mode when faced with the increasing processing load due to time pressure. These results empirically validate the role of formulaicity in second/foreign-language learners' processing styles.
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subjects Cognitive Psychology
English (Second Language)
Foreign Countries
Language Processing
Memory
Narration
Oral Language
Psycholinguistics
Role
Second Language Instruction
Second Language Learning
Task Analysis
Tunisia
Undergraduate Students
title Processing trade-offs in non-native learners' performance of narrative tasks
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