Curriculum Vitaes

Junya FUKUTA

  (福田 純也)

Profile Information

Affiliation
Associate Professor, Faculty of Letters, Gakushuin University
Degree
Ph.D(Nagoya University)

Other name(s) (e.g. nickname)
Junya FUKUTA
Researcher number
20781818
ORCID ID
 https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9291-048X
J-GLOBAL ID
201301082068880227
researchmap Member ID
B000232942

External link

Major Papers

 42
  • Junya Fukuta, Masato Terai
    Research Methods in Applied Linguistics, 5(1) 100291-100291, Apr, 2026  Peer-reviewedLead author
  • Junya Fukuta
    Second Language Research, Feb 12, 2026  
    In recent years, insights from cognitive psychology on unconscious learning have been applied to second language acquisition (SLA) research, proposing that unconscious knowledge gradually becomes conscious through repetitive experience. This perspective offers a reinterpretation of the interface between implicit and explicit knowledge in SLA, contrasting with the traditional view that explicit knowledge gives rise to implicit knowledge. While the phenomenon of unconscious knowledge becoming conscious provides valuable insights into the dynamics of knowledge acquisition, it also suggests the need to reconceptualize the traditional notions of implicit and explicit knowledge. This article aims to propose a framework that integrates recent insights on unconscious learning with traditional claims in SLA. Specifically, we propose replacing the unidimensional linear continuum view – which positions implicit and explicit knowledge as two ends of a single axis and conceptualizes second language development as a back-and-forth transition between these poles – with a multilayered knowledge view: The Hierarchical-Layer Model of Conscious–Unconscious Knowledge (H-L Model). This alternative model serves as a working hypothesis to better capture the multilayered and differentiated nature of linguistic cognition.
  • Junya Fukuta, Akira Murakami, Masato Terai, Yu Tamura
    Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 1-13, Feb 3, 2026  
    Abstract This study examines when and how second language (L2) learners begin to exhibit sensitivity to key factors influencing the choice between the English double object and prepositional object constructions. While previous research has shown that such choices in native speakers are influenced by such factors as animacy, pronominality and verb bias, little is known about the developmental timing of these effects in L2 production. Using 5,785 dative constructions from a large-scale learner corpus, we analyzed how these variables interact with learners’ proficiency levels across 23 verbs. We found that learners showed systematic sensitivity to all of these factors, including statistical verb bias derived from a native speaker corpus (Corpus of Contemporary American English), at much earlier stages than previously suggested. These results suggest that learners may possess a cognitive bias that maps preexisting conceptual structures onto linguistic constructions, reflecting more than mere statistical learning.
  • Junya Fukuta
    Second Language, 24 70-83, Oct, 2025  Lead authorCorresponding author
  • Itsuki Minemi, Takayuki Kimura, Takaaki Hirokawa, Yu Tamura, Junya Fukuta
    Proceedings of the 49th annual Boston University Conference on Language Development, 2 492-505, Sep, 2025  
  • Masato Terai, Junya Fukuta, Yu Tamura
    International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching, 62(4) 1959-1983, Nov 13, 2024  
    Abstract This study, based on Jiang’s (2000. Lexical representation and development in a second language. Applied Linguistics 21(1). 47–77) bilingual lexicon model, investigates the learnability of collocations among 34 Japanese EFL learners and examines the influence of their L1 on such learning. An acceptability judgment task assessed the knowledge of three different types of collocations: English-only collocations that cannot be directly translated into Japanese (e.g., flat rate); congruent collocations that can be translated into Japanese without changing their meaning (e.g., cold tea); and Japanized collocations that are infelicitous in English, but felicitous in Japanese (e.g., yellow voice). After the task, participants translated the collocations and rated the difficulty on a four-point Likert scale. The relationship between the accuracy of these collocations and the translation difficulty rating scores was analyzed using mixed-effects logistic regression modeling to assess L1 influence. The results showed that with increasing L2 proficiency, learners tend to regard congruent and English-only collocations as acceptable, but even highly proficient learners did not fully reject the Japanized collocations. This suggests that as L2 proficiency increased, participants learned to accept felicitous collocations but did not learn to reject Japanized infelicitous ones. In addition, the influence of L1 was evident in English-only and Japanized collocations and could not be avoided by those with increasing proficiency.
  • Junya Fukuta, Yoshito Nishimura, Yu Tamura
    Journal of Second Language Studies, 6(1) 95-118, Apr, 2023  Peer-reviewedLead author
    Abstract This article addresses the pitfalls of performance analysis in investigating cognitive processing during second language (L2) learning. The problems that we discuss in this paper are twofold: (1) Assuming psychological variables to be ontological entities without meeting the criteria for ontological reality and (2) Inappropriateness of assessing abilities based on learner’s speaking or writing performance to investigate cognitive processes. By addressing these problems, we argue that some latent variables postulated by observing L2 performance do not exist in reality and emphasize the difficulty of interpreting cognitive mechanisms through performance analysis. We also enumerate some problems that arise from the epistemological perspectives of previous research practice (e.g., the bifurcation of contradictory hypotheses and their indeterminacy). Finally, two alternative approaches treating L2 performance are proposed. The implications of this line of discussion for future research are also discussed.
  • Junya Fukuta, Junko Yamashita
    Second Language Research, 39(2) 425-446, Apr, 2023  Peer-reviewedLead authorCorresponding author
    This study investigates how implicit and explicit learning and knowledge are associated, by focusing on the salience of target form–meaning connections. The participants were engaged in incidental learning of artificial determiner systems that included grammatical rules of [± plural] (a taught rule), [± actor] (a more salient hidden rule), and [± animate] (a less salient hidden rule). They completed immediate and delayed post-tests by means of a two-alternative forced-choice task with subjective judgments of source attributions. Awareness during the learning phase was identified through analysis of thinking aloud protocols. The results did not support a one-to-one relation between either explicit learning and conscious knowledge, or implicit learning and unconscious knowledge; rather, they indicated that implicit and explicit learning are intricately linked to conscious and unconscious knowledge mediated by the salience of form–meaning connections in target items. This result also suggests the possibility of the later emergence of knowledge without any conscious awareness of it.
  • Yu Tamura, Junya Fukuta, Yoshito Nishimura, Daiki Kato
    International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching, Apr 29, 2022  Peer-reviewed
    Abstract Although native speakers (NSs) of English make plural agreement in preverbal-subject sentences (e.g., A pen and eraser *is/are…), previous studies have demonstrated that they prefer singular – not plural – agreement between verbs and conjoined noun phrases (NPs) in expletive there constructions (e.g., there is/are a pen and an eraser…), showing efficiency-driven processing prioritization of agreement between nearest constituents. This paper assesses whether Japanese L2 learners of English (JLE) show this tendency. The results of two self-paced reading experiments together indicated that even though efficiency-driven processing was available to L2 learners, their use was unstable due to the repeated exposure to there are NPpl- and NPpl-type sentences during the task. It seems possible that repeated exposure triggered learners’ knowledge that conjoined NPs are always plural. Hence, it could conceivably be hypothesized that a learner’s specific knowledge intervenes the efficiency-driven processing strategy.
  • YU TAMURA, JUNYA FUKUTA, YOSHITO NISHIMURA, YUI HARADA, KAZUHISA HARA, DAIKI KATO
    Applied Psycholinguistics, 40(1) 59-91, Jan, 2019  Peer-reviewed
    ABSTRACT This study aimed to investigate how Japanese learners of English as a foreign language, whose first language does not have obligatory morphological number marking, process conceptual plurality. The targeted structure was reciprocal verbs, which require conceptual plurality to interpret their meanings correctly. The results of a sentence completion task confirmed that participants could use reciprocal verbs reciprocally in English. In a self-paced reading experiment, participants read sentences with reciprocal verbs and those with optionally transitive verbs (e.g., while the king and the queen kissed/left the baby read the book in the bed). There was no reading time delay for reciprocal verbs but a delay for optionally transitive verbs. Therefore, the participants succeeded in processing second language conceptual plurality in the online sentence comprehension task.
  • Junya Fukuta, Goto Aki, Kawaguchi Yusaku, Kurita Akari, Murota Daisuke
    International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching, 56(3), Jan 23, 2017  Peer-reviewedLead authorCorresponding author
  • Junya Fukuta
    Language Teaching Research, 20(3) 321-340, May, 2016  Peer-reviewed
  • Junya Fukuta
    Applied Linguistics, 37(1) 121-127, Feb, 2016  Peer-reviewed
  • Junya Fukuta, Junko Yamashita
    System, 53 1-12, Oct, 2015  Peer-reviewedLead author
  • Junya Fukuta
    Acquisition of Japanese as a Second Language, 16(16) 125-141, Dec, 2013  Peer-reviewed

Misc.

 19

Major Books and Other Publications

 4

Major Presentations

 72

Teaching Experience

 9

Research Projects

 7

Social Activities

 3