1st Edition

The Routledge Handbook of Second Language Acquisition and Input Processing

Edited By Wynne Wong, Joe Barcroft Copyright 2024
    424 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This state-of-the-science handbook offers a comprehensive discussion of input processing in second language acquisition. The volume assesses past and current research on input processing and engages the reader in critical reflection about the current state of the field and what lies ahead for future research, theory-building, and implications for language instruction.

    The handbook considers multiple theoretical perspectives, pivotal research findings, issues in research methodology, and instructional implications that underscore the centrality of input processing in second language acquisition. Whereas to date most research in this area has focused on input processing as it relates to the acquisition of morphosyntax and lexis, the present volume also attends to more recent theoretical advances regarding other linguistic subsystems, such as phonology and pragmatics, as well as processing resource allocation during multilevel input processing.

    Thorough and forward-looking, this volume is an indispensable resource to scholars and advanced students of second language acquisition, bilingualism, applied linguistics, cognitive science, psychology, and education.

    List of Figures

     

    List of Tables

     

    List of Contributors

     

    Acknowledgements

     

    Ch 1 Introduction: Input Processing, Where Language Acquisition Begins

    Wynne Wong & Joe Barcroft

     

    PART I: INPUT PROCESSING: TYPES AND CONTEXTS

     

    Ch 2 Multilevel Input Processing: The Framework and Its Future

    Joe Barcroft

     

    Ch 3 Input Processing in Spoken Versus Written Language

    Ronald P. Leow & Fei Li

     

    Ch 4 Input Processing in L1 Acquisition and Simultaneous Bilingualism

    John Schwieter & Alessandro Benati

     

    PART II: ISSUES IN LINGUISTIC THEORIES

     

    Ch 5 Input Processing in Generative Second Language Acquisition

    Laurent Dekydtspotter

     

    Ch 6 Input Processing and Usage-Based Approaches

    Alfonso Morales-Front & Joe Barcroft

     

    Ch 7 Input Processing in Conceptual Semantics

    Susanne E. Carroll & Lindsay Hracs

     

    PART III: ISSUES IN OTHER THEORIES AND MODELS

     

    Ch 8 VanPatten’s Theory of Input Processing in L2 Acquisition

    Michael J. Leeser

     

    Ch 9 Input Processing as an Interaction Between Internal and External Context: The Modular Cognition Framework

    Michael Sharwood Smith & John Truscott

     

    Ch 10 The Declarative/Procedural Model and Input Processing

    Sarah Grey

     

    Ch 11 The Type of Processing – Resource Allocation (TOPRA) Model

    Shusaku Kida

     

    PART IV: MECHANISMS OF INPUT PROCESSING AND THE ACQUISITION OF MORPHOSYNTAX

     

    Ch 12 Attention to Form and Meaning: VanPatten (1990) and Beyond

    Cristina Sanz

     

    Ch 13 Lexical Preference in Input Processing

    Justin P. White & Wynne Wong

     

    Ch 14 The First-noun Principle

    Russell Simonsen & Bill VanPatten

     

    Ch 15 Roles of Interaction and Output in Input Processing

    Janire Zalbidea & Paul Toth

     

    PART V: MECHANISMS OF INPUT PROCESSING AND THE ACQUISITION OF PHONOLOGY, LEXIS, AND PRAGMATICS

     

    Ch 16 Input Processing and the Acquisition of Phonology

    Annie Tremblay

     

    Ch 17 Input Processing and Incidental Vocabulary Acquisition

    Susanne Rott

     

    Ch 18 Input Processing and Intentional Vocabulary Acquisition

    Akifumi Yanagisawa

     

    Ch 19 Input Processing and the Acquisition of Pragmatics

    Friederike Fichtner

     

    PART VI: INPUT PROCESSING AND SECOND LANGUAGE INSTRUCTION

     

    Ch 20 Thirty Years of Processing Instruction and Structured Input

    Wynne Wong

     

    Ch 21 Explicit Information, Input Processing, and Second Language Acquisition

    Nick Henry

     

    Ch 22 Comprehensible Input in Language Instruction: Approaches and Techniques

    Philippa Bell & Caroline Payant

     

    Ch 23 Approaches to Vocabulary Instruction from an Input Processing Perspective

    Brent Wolter

     

    PART VII: METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES IN RESEARCH ON INPUT PROCESSING

     

    Ch 24 A Systematic Methodological Review of offline Input Processing Research

    Simón Ruiz & Patrick Rebuschat

     

    Ch 25 Research on Online Input Processing: Self-Paced Reading, Eye-tracking, ERPs, and Beyond

    Jill Jegerski

     

    Ch 26 Think-aloud protocol, Trials-to-criterion, and Triangulation Between Online and Offline Measures in IP Research

    Silvia Marijuan

     

    Epilogue: Interview with Bill VanPatten

     

    Index

    Biography

    Wynne Wong is Professor of French and Second Language Acquisition at The Ohio State University, USA. She is the author of Input Enhancement: From Theory and Research to the Classroom (2005) and lead author of two French textbooks: Liaisons (2013, 2019) and Encore (2016, 2020). She is/has been on the editorial board of the journal Instructed Second Language Acquisition and on the advisory committee of The Canadian Modern Language Review.

    Joe Barcroft is Professor of Spanish and Second Language Acquisition and Affiliate Professor of Psychological & Brain Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis, USA. His books include Lexical Input Processing and Vocabulary Learning (2015); Input-Based Incremental Vocabulary Acquisition (2012); and the volume, co-edited with Javier Muñoz-Basols, Spanish Vocabulary Learning in Meaning-Oriented Instruction (2021).

    This comprehensive and balanced collection of papers on learning from input processing will be welcomed by those beginning their study of input processing as well as those who are familiar with the field. The papers included tackle the major issues and do so with clarity and authority. It is especially pleasing to see that vocabulary is now getting the attention it deserves in this crucial area of second language acquisition.

    Paul Nation, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand

    This impressive handbook comprehensively brings together key topics in input processing as written by renowned scholars and remarkably establishes connections with related theoretical, empirical, methodological, and pedagogical work. Thus, it offers innovative directions for understanding input processing and second/additional language acquisition more generally.

    Kara Morgan-Short, University of Illinois Chicago, USA

    In this cutting-edge and mesmerizingly insightful handbook, Drs. Wong and Barcroft share the writings of a generation’s worth of wisdom on the brain’s mechanisms in acquiring new languages. This is a volume every applied linguist should read.

    Paula Winke, Michigan State University, USA