AmaralLRoeperT (2014) Multiple Grammars and second language representation. Second Language Research30: 3–36.
2.
BjörnsdóttirSM (2016) Gender in North American Icelandic: A case study of attrition. Poster presented at workshop on Heritage Language Acquisition: Breaking New Ground in Methodology and Domains of Inquiry, UiT The Arctic University of Norway.
3.
BlumenfeldHMarianV (2013) Parallel language activation and cognitive control during spoken word recognition in bilinguals. Journal of Cognitive Psychology25: 547–67.
4.
CunningsI (2017) Parsing and working memory in bilingual sentence processing. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition20: 659–78.
5.
Del MaschioNAbutalebiJ (2019) Language organization in the bilingual and multilingual brain. The handbook of the neuroscience of multilingualism. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, pp. 199–213.
6.
DomínguezLHicksGSlabakovaR (2019) Terminology choice in generative acquisition research: the case of ‘incomplete acquisition’ in heritage language grammars. Studies in Second Language Acquisition41: 241–55.
7.
HicksGDomínguezL (2020) A model for L1 grammatical attrition. Second Language Research36(2): 143–165.
8.
HulkAMüllerN (2000) Bilingual first language acquisition at the interface between syntax and pragmatics. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition3: 227–44.
9.
KrollJFDussiasPEBogulskiCAValdes-KroffJ (2012) Juggling two languages in one mind: What bilinguals tell us about language processing and its consequences for cognition. In: RossB (ed) The psychology of learning and motivation, volume 56. San Diego, CA: Academic Press, pp. 229–62.
10.
KupischTRothmanJ (2016) Terminology matters! Why difference is not incompleteness and how early child bilinguals are heritage speakers. International Journal of Bilingualism22: 564–82.
11.
LidzJGagliardiA (2015) How nature meets nurture: Universal Grammar and statistical learning. Annual Review of Linguistics1: 333–52.
12.
LohndalTWestergaardM (2016) Grammatical gender in American Norwegian heritage language: Stability or attrition?Frontiers in Psychology7: 344.
13.
MontrulS (2008) Incomplete acquisition in bilingualism: Re-examining the age factor. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
14.
PolinskyM (2008) Gender under incomplete acquisition: Heritage speakers’ knowledge of noun categorization. Heritage Language Journal6: 40–71.
15.
SlabakovaR (2017) The scalpel model of third language acquisition. International Journal of Bilingualism21: 651–65.
16.
SnyderW (2007) Child language: The parametric approach. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
17.
WestergaardM (2009) The acquisition of word order: Micro-cues, information structure and economy. Linguistik Aktuell / Linguistics Today 145. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
18.
WestergaardM (2014) Linguistic variation and micro-cues in first language acquisition. Linguistic Variation14: 26–45.
19.
WestergaardMMitrofanovaNMykhaylykRRodinaY (2017) Crosslinguistic influence in the acquisition of a third language: The Linguistic Proximity Model. International Journal of Bilingualism21: 666–82.
20.
WestergaardM (forthcoming) Microvariation in multilingual situations: The importance of property-by-property acquisition. Keynote article in Second Language Research.