The use of language as a universal tool for communication and interaction is the backbone of human society. General sociocultural milieu and specific contextual factors can strongly influence various aspects of linguistic experience, including language acquisition and use and the respective internal neurolinguistic processes. This is particularly relevant in the case of bilingualism, which encompasses a diverse set of linguistic experiences, greatly influenced by societal, cultural, educational, and personal factors. In this perspective piece, we focus on a specific type of linguistic experience: non-pathological first-language (L1) attrition—a phenomenon that is strongly tied to immersion in non-L1 environments. We present our view on what...
L1 attrition is the (partial) language loss that is found in healthy individuals who stop routinely ...
International audienceThe study of L1 attrition is currently entering its third decade. However, aft...
While the factor ‘language contact’ is often named among the most important for the development of i...
The use of language as a universal tool for communication and interaction is the backbone of human s...
This review aims at clarifying the concept of first language attrition by tracing its limits, identi...
International audienceThis collection of articles provides theoretical foundations and perspectives ...
Speakers who routinely use more than one language may not use any of their languages in ways which a...
The decay in the proficiency of the native language (L1), known as first language attrition, is one ...
Introduction The multi-competence approach views bilingual development as a wholistic process that i...
XVIII Jornades de Foment de la Investigació de la Facultat de Ciències Humanes i Socials (Any 2013)...
Speakers who live in an L2 environment for an extended period of time often experience change in the...
International audienceResearch on the bilingual mental lexicon has progressed considerably over the ...
According to the United Nations, there were 244 million international migrants in the world in 2015....
The overwhelming bias for investigations of bilingualism is to focus on the increase of knowledge an...
L1 attrition is the (partial) language loss that is found in healthy individuals who stop routinely ...
L1 attrition is the (partial) language loss that is found in healthy individuals who stop routinely ...
International audienceThe study of L1 attrition is currently entering its third decade. However, aft...
While the factor ‘language contact’ is often named among the most important for the development of i...
The use of language as a universal tool for communication and interaction is the backbone of human s...
This review aims at clarifying the concept of first language attrition by tracing its limits, identi...
International audienceThis collection of articles provides theoretical foundations and perspectives ...
Speakers who routinely use more than one language may not use any of their languages in ways which a...
The decay in the proficiency of the native language (L1), known as first language attrition, is one ...
Introduction The multi-competence approach views bilingual development as a wholistic process that i...
XVIII Jornades de Foment de la Investigació de la Facultat de Ciències Humanes i Socials (Any 2013)...
Speakers who live in an L2 environment for an extended period of time often experience change in the...
International audienceResearch on the bilingual mental lexicon has progressed considerably over the ...
According to the United Nations, there were 244 million international migrants in the world in 2015....
The overwhelming bias for investigations of bilingualism is to focus on the increase of knowledge an...
L1 attrition is the (partial) language loss that is found in healthy individuals who stop routinely ...
L1 attrition is the (partial) language loss that is found in healthy individuals who stop routinely ...
International audienceThe study of L1 attrition is currently entering its third decade. However, aft...
While the factor ‘language contact’ is often named among the most important for the development of i...