Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 May 2002
This study explores the developmental pattern observed when Japanese adult learners acquire the locality condition on English reflexives. Experimental tasks were designed specifically to deal with the methodological problems of earlier research and then administered to Japanese learners of English at five proficiency levels (n = 411) as well as English and Japanese control groups (n = 40). Results from the learner groups indicate that the locality condition is acquired significantly better with sentences containing embedded that-clauses (type E-1) than with sentences containing embedded infinitival clauses (type E-2). This asymmetry exists even at beginning stages of learning and persists through later stages. For type E-2 clauses, there is an appreciable percentage of advanced learners (about 35% in this study) who failed to acquire the locality condition, which, I argue, is extremely difficult to account for within the UG models proposed thus far.