Herrero Soler, Honesto, Rosario Martínez Arias & Marian Amengual Pizarro. 2011. Estadística aplicada a la investigación lingüística (Statistics Applied to Language Research)
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Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
info
ISSN: 1697-0381
Year of publication: 2013
Issue: 10
Pages: 131-135
Type: Book review
More publications in: VIAL, Vigo international journal of applied linguistics
Abstract
The relationship between vocabulary knowledge and the ability to repeat small amounts of verbal information has been the focus of intense research. Significant positive correlations have been reported between scores representing vocabulary knowledge and scores representing the ability to repeat nonwords or lists of nonwords. In cross-lagged correlational studies, phonological short-term memory (PSTM) has been shown causally to affect subsequent vocabulary knowledge in L1 acquisition as well as in L2 learning at lower but not higher proficiency levels. At higher proficiency levels, performance on vocabulary tasks has been shown to be facilitated by the growth of the mental lexicon (and growing knowledge of phonological regularities), and to exhibit a reduced impact of PSTM capacity. With respect to L2 collocations, prior to the current study the impact of PSTM on L2 collocational knowledge had not been explored in instructed L2 learning. On the one hand, it is plausible to speculate that the link between PSTM and L2 collocations diminishes with increasing L2 proficiency; on the other, it is also possible that at post-elementary levels of proficiency, with increasing automaticity of lexical knowledge, PSTM may be redeployed for the learning of more complex structures. The current study detected a significant relationship between PSTM and subsequent collocation knowledge at both elementary (A2) and pre-intermediate (B1) proficiency levels in adult L2 learning.