In:Language Attrition: Theoretical perspectives
Edited by Barbara Köpke, Monika S. Schmid, Merel Keijzer and Susan Dostert
[Studies in Bilingualism 33] 2007
► pp. 39–51
Understanding attrition within a MOGUL framework
Published online: 8 August 2007
https://doi.org/10.1075/sibil.33.04sha
https://doi.org/10.1075/sibil.33.04sha
Linguistically-based accounts of attrition may give us an analysis of the properties of language observed at particular points in time. Then, by comparing states, we may try to explain the transition between them but, still, discussion concerning the actual mechanisms of change is typically left aside. The same may be said of studies of language acquisition. To integrate accounts of linguistic states at different points in time with psycholinguistic explanations about the transition from one state to the next, we require a broader, interdisciplinary approach. Sharwood Smith and Truscott’s MOGUL (Modular Growth and Use of Language) is one such framework, adapting Ray Jackendoff’s model of the language faculty to show how real-time processes might drive representational change over time.
Cited by (4)
Cited by four other publications
Lubińska, Dorota
Yılmaz, Gülsen & Monika S. Schmid
2018. First language attrition and bilingualism. In
Bilingual Cognition and Language [Studies in Bilingualism, 54], ► pp. 225 ff.
Truscott, John & Michael Sharwood Smith
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