"Accounting for individual differences in second language acquisition: The role of long-term memory." Foreign Language Learning Colloquium Speaker Series Talk
Kara Morgan-Short
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Professor, Hispanic Linguistics and Psychology
Interim Associate Director, School of Literature, Cultural Studies, and Linguistics
University of Illinois at Chicago
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Accounting for individual differences in second language acquisition can contribute to our understanding of the mechanisms involved in language acquisition and can have implications for language learning endeavors. Here, I consider the role of two, long-term, cognitive memory systems as individual differences in the acquisition of second language grammar. In doing so, I first describe the declarative and procedural memory systems and consider theories that address a role for declarative and procedural memory in second language acquisition. Next, I discuss behavioral and electrophysiological evidence in regard to predictions made by the theories. I also consider how the contributions of these long-term memory systems may interact with each other and with different learning conditions. Finally, I conclude with discussion of important directions and questions for future research on the role of declarative and procedural memory as individual differences in second language.