英文摘要 |
Language learning, be it first or additional, necessarily requires the support of basic cognitive mechanisms. The usage-based theory of language learning, as represented by Tomasello’s work, stresses that learning takes place while using the language and that two innate cognitive mechanisms support the learning. The pattern finding mechanism tracks and discovers the regularities in the linguistic input. The intention reading mechanism determines the intended meaning of the linguistic input during social interaction. It is believed that the pattern-finding mechanism tracks and discovers statistical regularities that form the basis of the so-called grammar in a language. Human learners are equipped with the statistical learning mechanism to determine if a given linguistic input is grammatical. Past research has found that the statistical learning mechanism plays an essential role in both first and additional language learning and that it is available to both child and adult learners. The present article reviews this research and discusses its implications for applied research in second language acquisition and the potential applications for teaching a foreign/second language. |