Revista Linguística (Dec 2022)

Structural priming effects during the oral production of English as l2

  • Francineide Fatima Davies dos Santos,
  • Mailce Borges Mota

DOI
https://doi.org/10.31513/linguistica.2022.v18n3a57465
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 3
pp. 50 – 72

Abstract

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Structural priming effects in L1 oral production are associated with the automatic nature of processing and implicit knowledge. In L2, however, these effects are not well known. The present study investigated syntactic processing in the oral production of Brazilian Portuguese late learners of English as L2 to determine if structural priming effects can be detected within the L2. To do so, participants performed an oral sentence production task in English within four experimental conditions in which the use of active and passive voices with and without repetition of the main verb was manipulated. Participants also performed an oral sentence production task in the active and passive voice that served as a baseline to detect their individual preferences in the use of verbal voices. Results demonstrated a complex interaction between structural priming effects and the individual tendency to reuse the syntactic structure in L2. Results also showed a greater production of the passive voice structure in the experimental conditions in comparison to the baseline. Furthermore, the effects of structural priming were mainly found in conditions 3 and 4, which were both related to the passive voice, the less frequent structure. The results in condition 3 indicated an interaction of structural priming effects and the repetition of the head of the structure (i.e., the verb), meaning that verb repetition boosted these effects when structure (i.e., the passive voice) and verb were repeated (lexical boost). Taken together, these findings provide evidence for structural priming in English as L2 during oral production, mainly in the passive voice structure.

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