@article{841, author = {Karina Tachihara and Adele Goldberg}, title = {Learning unacceptability: Repeated exposure to acceptable sentences improves adult learners{\textquoteright} recognition of unacceptable sentences}, abstract = {

Adults learning a new language tend to judge unconventional utterances more leniently than fluent speakers do; ratings on acceptable utterances, however, tend to align more closely with fluent speakers. This asymmetry raises a question as to whether unconventional utterances can be statistically preempted by conventional utter- ances for adult learners. We report a preregistered study that provided undergraduates in Spanish classes with three days of exposure to conventional Spanish sentences without feedback. Judgment data reveal a significant effect of statistical preemption, particularly on intermediate learners, as predicted: Repeatedly witnessing conventional sentences led learners to subsequently judge as significantly lower the corresponding unconven- tional formulations in comparison to unrelated unconventional sentences. Current find- ings indicate that adult learners can take advantage of statistical preemption to learn the unacceptability of unconventional sentences from repeated exposure to acceptable alternatives, without explicit instruction or feedback.

}, year = {2024}, journal = {Language Learning}, pages = {1-40}, publisher = {PsyArXiv}, url = {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/lang.12660}, }