The study investigates the role of attention in monitoring second language
speech production by means of analyzing the distribution and frequency of s
elf-repairs and the correction rate of errors in the speech of 30 Hungarian
learners of English at 3 levels of proficiency and of 10 native speakers o
f Hungarian. The results indicate that the amount of attention paid to the
linguistic form of the utterance does not vary at different stages of L2 co
mpetence and that the distribution of attention in monitoring for errors is
markedly different in L1 and L2. In the case of advanced L2 speakers, the
extra attentional resources made available by the automaticity of certain e
ncoding processes were used for checking the discourse-level aspects of the
ir message.