Gesture and Multimodality in Second Language Acquisition


Book Description

This timely text offers a how-to guide for analyzing gesture and multimodality in second language learning and teaching. Expert contributors from around the world outline the theoretical basis for each topic and offer clear descriptions of data collection and analysis methods for classroom, naturalistic, quasi-experimental, and experimental settings. The book further offers a rich array of ancillary pedagogical material and points out areas ripe for future study. This will be an invaluable resource for undergraduate and graduate students, faculty, and researchers of applied linguistics, communications, education, and psychology interested in gesture studies and multimodality in L2 learning and teaching.




L2 English Listeners' Comprehension


Book Description

Visual cues such as seeing the speaker's face and gestures have been found to facilitate second-language (L2) listeners' comprehension of native English speech (Sueyoshi & Hardison, 2005). Very few studies attempted to investigate how audiovisual cues affect the comprehension of nonnative accented speech (e.g., Barros, 2010; Zheng & Samuel, 2019). The findings of these studies have been inconclusive, and these mixed results can be ascribed to the varying degrees of speakers' accents, the lack of comprehensibility and accentedness ratings and/or lack of descriptions of nonnative speaker's gesture use. To address this, the present study examined: a) whether speaker's accent (native vs. nonnative) and stimulus condition (i.e., audiovisual (AV) including speaker's gesture and face vs. audiovisual including only speaker's face vs. audio (A) only) affect L2 listeners' comprehension of English discourse, b) whether stimulus condition affects L2 listeners' accentedness and comprehensibility ratings of native and nonnative speech, c) whether speaker's accent and stimulus condition affect L2 listeners' perception of and preference for visual cues, and d) whether speaker's accent affects L2 listeners' preference for visual cues in everyday communication and L2 language development.A total of 120 Arab university students who were L2 learners of English in the US, UK, Australia or the Middle East were assigned to one of six conditions: a) native speaker-AV-gesture-face (n= 20), b) native speaker-AV-face (n= 20), c) native speaker-A-only (n= 20), d) nonnative speaker-AV-gesture-face (n= 20), e) nonnative speaker-AV-face (n= 20), and c) nonnative speaker-A-only (n= 20). The participants in each condition completed: a multiple-choice listening comprehension test in segments following audiovisual or A-only clips of a native or nonnative speaker's lecture on the same topic, a comprehensibility and accentedness questionnaire, a preference for and perception of visual cues questionnaire and an optional follow-up interview.Listening comprehension scores were significantly higher for native speech versus nonnative speech. Results revealed that seeing the native speaker's gestures had some facilitative effects. Such facilitative effects were not observed for the listening comprehension scores for the nonnative speaker. The positive and facilitative effects of seeing the native speaker's gestures were also observed in the L2 listeners' accentedness and comprehensibility ratings of native speech. The native speaker was rated as most comprehensible and nativelike in the AV-gesture-face condition; such positive effects of seeing the speaker's gestures were not observed in the ratings of nonnative speech. Surprisingly, the nonnative speaker was rated as least nativelike in the AV-gesture-face condition, and stimulus condition had no significant effect on comprehensibility ratings of nonnative speech. Responses to the questionnaires and follow-up interview indicated that, unlike for the native speaker, seeing the nonnative speaker's face and/or gestures was not facilitative. The responses uncovered a general preference for visual cues in L2 listeners' everyday communication and in developing their English skills. Responses also uncovered L2 listeners' general preference for native English speech versus nonnative.The findings of this study shed light on how and when visual cues and accent can decrease or increase L2 listeners' comprehension. The results provide valuable implications for L2 pedagogy and assessment and it raises a number of important questions that can help further extend this line of research on the effects of visual cues and accented speech.




Second Language Listening


Book Description

As an essential part of communicative competence, listening is a skill which deserves equal treatment with the other basic skills of speaking, reading, and writing. Second Language Listening combines up-to-date listening theory with case studies of actual pedagogical practice. The authors describe current models of listening theory and exemplify each with a textbook task. They address the role of technology in teaching listening, questioning techniques, and testing. Second Language Listening is designed to be used with both pre-service and in-service teachers who are involved in the teaching of listening or the design of pedagogic materials for listening.







Neurogenic Communication Disorders


Book Description

This book is the first to fully define and describe the functional approach to neurogenic communication and swallowing disorders. Featuring contributions from leading experts and researchers worldwide, this volume outlines diverse treatment and assessment strategies using the functional approach, also examining them from a consumer and payer perspective. These strategies are designed to improve the day-to-day life of patients, while providing third parties with the practical outcomes they seek. This outstanding book is ideal for SLPs and graduate students in speech-language pathology programs.




The Routledge Handbook of Second Language Acquisition


Book Description

This handbook brings together 50 leading international figures in the field to produce a state-of-the-art overview of second language acquisition.




The Routledge Handbook of Second Language Acquisition and Listening


Book Description

The Routledge Handbook of Second Language Acquisition and Listening offers a state-of-the-art, systematic discussion of the role of listening in second language acquisition (SLA) and use. This handbook positions listening not just as a receptive comprehension skill, but also as an integral part of interaction, a vital component in the process of language acquisition, and a skill which needs attention in its own right. World-leading international scholars synthesize and contextualize the salient theoretical approaches, methodological issues, empirical findings, practical applications, and emerging themes in L2 listening development and processing. They illustrate the role that L2 listening ability plays in understanding SLA and interactional competence, and set the future research agenda to move the field forward. This volume is an indispensable resource to students, scholars, and practitioners from the fields of SLA, cognitive psychology, language teaching, and assessment, as well as those interested in pronunciation, speaking, and oral communication.




Multisensory and sensorimotor interactions in speech perception


Book Description

Speech is multisensory since it is perceived through several senses. Audition is the most important one as speech is mostly heard. The role of vision has long been acknowledged since many articulatory gestures can be seen on the talker's face. Sometimes speech can even be felt by touching the face. The best-known multisensory illusion is the McGurk effect, where incongruent visual articulation changes the auditory percept. The interest in the McGurk effect arises from a major general question in multisensory research: How is information from different senses combined? Despite decades of research, a conclusive explanation for the illusion remains elusive. This is a good demonstration of the challenges in the study of multisensory integration. Speech is special in many ways. It is the main means of human communication, and a manifestation of a unique language system. It is a signal with which all humans have a lot of experience. We are exposed to it from birth, and learn it through development in face-to-face contact with others. It is a signal that we can both perceive and produce. The role of the motor system in speech perception has been debated for a long time. Despite very active current research, it is still unclear to which extent, and in which role, the motor system is involved in speech perception. Recent evidence shows that brain areas involved in speech production are activated during listening to speech and watching a talker's articulatory gestures. Speaking involves coordination of articulatory movements and monitoring their auditory and somatosensory consequences. How do auditory, visual, somatosensory, and motor brain areas interact during speech perception? How do these sensorimotor interactions contribute to speech perception? It is surprising that despite a vast amount of research, the secrets of speech perception have not yet been solved. The multisensory and sensorimotor approaches provide new opportunities in solving them. Contributions to the research topic are encouraged for a wide spectrum of research on speech perception in multisensory and sensorimotor contexts, including novel experimental findings ranging from psychophysics to brain imaging, theories and models, reviews and opinions.




Global Perspectives on Language Assessment


Book Description

The sixth volume in the Global Research on Teaching and Learning English series offers up-to-date research on the rapidly changing field of language assessment. The book features original research with chapters reporting on a variety of international education settings from a range of diverse perspectives. Covering a broad range of key topics—including scoring processes, test development, and student and teacher perspectives—contributors offer a comprehensive overview of the landscape of language assessment and discuss the consequences and impact for learners, teachers, learning programs, and society. Focusing on the assessment of language proficiency, this volume provides an original compendium of cutting-edge research that will benefit TESOL and TEFL students, language assessment scholars, and language teachers.