
Declarative and Procedural Determinants of Second Languages
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Content
- Declarative and Procedural Determinants of Second Languages
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of contents
- Preface
- Chapter 1. Key concepts, framework, and clarifications
- 1. Definition of key concepts
- 1.1 Definitions of "implicit"
- 1.2 Automaticity
- 1.3 Proficiency, accuracy, fluency, and other measures
- 2. Clarifications about the framework
- 2.1 Serendipity or the birth of the application of the declarative/procedural distinction to language representation and processing
- 2.2 Declarative/procedural models
- 2.3 Why vocabulary and lexicon differ
- 2.4 Degree of availability of procedural memory
- 2.5 There is no continuum from automatic to controlled processing
- 2.6 The content of metalinguistic knowledge and implicit competence
- 2.7 Interference, variability, and other indicators of explicitness
- 2.8 Macro-anatomical and micro-anatomical levels of representation
- 3. Conclusion
- Chapter 2. Consciousness in L2 appropriation
- 1. Only specific types of representations can become conscious - others cannot
- 1.1 Only a subset of explicit representations are active at any given time
- 1.2 The threshold of consciousness
- 1.3 Consciousness of input and output but not of implicit processes in between
- 1.4 Consciousness and working memory
- 2. Perception, attention and noticing
- 2.1 Attention in second language acquisition and learning
- 3. Explicit input is not implicit intake
- 3.1 The double implicitness of intake
- 4. Neurobiological and neurochemical bases of consciousness
- 5. Conclusion
- Chapter 3. The disintegration of the explicit/implicit interface debate (or interface newspeak?)
- 1. The meaning of interface
- 1.1 The premises: Learning and acquisition are distinct
- explicit knowledge is not transformed into implicit competence
- 2. The so-called "dynamic interface" is no interface
- 2.1 No interface but switching from one to the other
- 3. Consciousness cannot possibly be the interface
- 4. An indirect influence is not an interface
- 5. None of the proposed characterizations are compatible with an interface
- 6. Illusory and untenable would-be evidence
- 6.1 From seeds to trees
- 6.2 Tuning
- 6.3 Proceduralization
- 6.4 Ambiguities
- 6.5 Inapplicable analogies and metaphors
- 7. Description of explicit phenomena contributing to metalinguistic knowledge
- 8. Why adults should need explicit metalinguistic knowledge
- 9. Indirect influence of metalinguistic knowledge on acquisition not denied
- 10. How explicit knowledge benefits implicit acquisition - indirectly
- 11. The contexts of learning and acquisition
- 12. Conclusion
- Chapter 4. Ultimate attainment in L2 proficiency
- 1. Ultimate attainment in L1 and L2
- 2. The optimal period
- 3. Optimal window of opportunity
- 4. The optimal period is restricted to implicit linguistic competence
- 4.1 Inter-individual variability in attainment
- 4.2 The impact of working memory and level of education
- 4.3 The success in semantics relative to syntax and phonology
- 4.4 The decline in L2 performance with increasing age
- 4.5 The ease of appropriation and use of L1 vs. L2
- 4.6 You don't learn L2 the way you acquired L1, do you? How come?
- 5. Optimal period and the right hemisphere
- 6. Evidence adduced against a critical period
- 7. Factors invoked in lieu of a neurobiological critical period to account for poor performance in L2 are actually the consequences of an optimal period
- 7.1 Effects due to age are a consequence of brain processes
- 7.2 Native language entrenchment
- 8. Conclusion
- Chapter 5. The pervasive relevance of the distinction between implicit competence and explicit knowledge
- 1. Implications of the declarative/procedural distinction for laterality studies
- 2. Implications of the declarative/procedural distinction for imaging studies
- 2.1 Words of caution about the interpretation of neuroimaging studies
- 2.2 Consequences of not distinguishing word studies from sentence studies
- 2.3 The nature of the additional cortical resources reported to be recruited for L2
- 3. Procedural and declarative language switching and mixing
- 3.1 Types of switches and consequences
- 3.2 Switching data from neuroimaging studies
- 3.3 Switching data from clinical studies
- 3.4 Conscious and automatic control mechanisms in language switching
- 4. Data from clinical studies
- 4.1 Data from bilingual neuropsychiatric disorders
- 4.2 Data from bilingual aphasia
- 4.3 Data from other cerebral accidents/conditions
- 5. The declarative/procedural distinction and the subsystems hypothesis
- 6. Declarative and procedural translation strategies
- 7. Further indications of declarative/procedural relevance
- 7.1 Variability in appropriation in L2 vs. systematicity in L1
- 7.2 L2 accent changes faster than L1 accent when speakers relocate to an area where a different variety is spoken
- 7.3 Additional evidence for L1 implicit procedural memory and L2 explicit declarative memory
- 8. Conclusion
- Summary of key proposals
- References
- Subject index
- The series Studies in Bilingualism (SiBil)
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