IMPLICITNESS AND EXPLICITNESS IN COGNITIVE ABILITIES AND CORRECTIVE FEEDBACK A DOUBLE DISSOCIATION?

dc.contributor.authorYilmaz, Yucel
dc.contributor.authorGranena, Gisela
dc.date.accessioned2025-02-20T16:00:02Z
dc.date.available2025-02-20T16:00:02Z
dc.date.issued2021-05-10
dc.descriptionThis record is for a(n) offprint of an article published in Studies in Second Language Acquisition on 2021-05-10.
dc.description.abstractThis aptitude–treatment interaction study investigated the extent to which explicit and implicit cognitive abilities are differentially related to learning outcomes under two corrective feedback conditions. One hundred and thirteen intermediate English learners of Spanish were randomly assigned to an implicit feedback (recast), explicit feedback (explicit correction), or control group after completing tests from two aptitude batteries (High-Level Language Aptitude Battery [Hi-LAB] and LLAMA). Linguistic improvement on noun-adjective gender agreement and Differential Object Marking was assessed using grammaticality judgment and oral production tasks. Results showed that implicit but not explicit abilities were relevant for the acquisition of gender agreement under implicit feedback as measured by grammaticality judgments. In contrast, explicit but not implicit abilities were relevant for the acquisition of object marking under explicit feedback as measured by oral production. These results lent support to a double dissociation, but they also suggested higher-order interaction effects between the type of cognitive ability, outcome measure, and target structure.
dc.description.versionoffprint
dc.identifier.citationYilmaz, Yucel, and Granena, Gisela. "IMPLICITNESS AND EXPLICITNESS IN COGNITIVE ABILITIES AND CORRECTIVE FEEDBACK A DOUBLE DISSOCIATION?." Studies in Second Language Acquisition, pp. 1-28, 2021-05-10.
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2022/32700
dc.language.isoen
dc.relation.journalStudies in Second Language Acquisition
dc.subjectrecasts
dc.subjectcorrective feedback
dc.subjectcognitive individual differences
dc.subjectaptitude
dc.subjectimplicit learning
dc.subjectexplicit correction
dc.titleIMPLICITNESS AND EXPLICITNESS IN COGNITIVE ABILITIES AND CORRECTIVE FEEDBACK A DOUBLE DISSOCIATION?

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