Bilingual Sentence Processing

Relative clause attachment in English and Spanish

Eva M. Fernández
Queens College - City University of New York
The cross-linguistic differences documented in studies of relative clause attachment offer an invaluable opportunity to examine a particular aspect of bilingual sentence processing: Do bilinguals process their two languages as if they were monolingual speakers of each? This volume provides a review of existing research on relative clause attachment, showing that speakers of languages like English attach relative clauses differently than do speakers of languages like Spanish. Fernández reports the findings of an investigation with monolinguals and bilinguals, tested using speeded ("on-line") and unspeeded ("off-line") methodology, with materials in both English and Spanish. The experiments reveal similarities across the groups when the procedure is speeded, but differences with unspeeded questionnaires: The monolinguals replicate the standard cross-linguistic differences, while bilinguals have language-independent preferences determined by language dominance — bilinguals process stimuli in either of their languages according to the general preferences of monolinguals of their dominant language.
[Language Acquisition and Language Disorders, 29]  2003.  xx, 294 pp.
Publishing status: Available
HardboundAvailable
ISBN 9789027224989 (Eur) | EUR 110.00
ISBN 9781588113450 (USA) | USD 165.00
 
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Table of Contents

List of tables
ix
List of figures
xiii
List of appendixes
xv
Abstract
xvii
Foreword
xix
Introduction
1–4
Cross-linguistic differences in sentence processing: The relative clause attachment ambiguity
5–66
Language dependency and bilingual sentence processing
67–96
Materials evaluation: Quality control for experimental sentences
97–124
Monolingual experimental data on relative clause attachment preferences
125–159
Bilingual experimental data on relative clause attachment preferences
161–209
Conclusions
211–220
Appendixes
221–271
References
273–284
Author index
285–288
Subject index
289–292

Quotes

“Overall, the findings in this book are stimulating and thought provoking.”
Javier Gutiérrez-Rexach, Ohio State University, in Studies in Language 30(1), 2006

Subjects

Benjamins Subject classification

BIC Subject

CFDC: Language acquisition

BISAC Subject

LAN009000: LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics
U.S. Library of Congress Control Number:  2002035647
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