Newman Aaron J, Bavelier Daphne, Corina David, Jezzard Peter, Neville Helen J
Department of Psychology, 1227 University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon 97403-1227, USA.
Nat Neurosci. 2002 Jan;5(1):76-80. doi: 10.1038/nn775.
Signed languages such as American Sign Language (ASL) are natural languages that are formally similar to spoken languages, and thus present an opportunity to examine the effects of language structure and modality on the neural organization for language. Native learners of spoken languages show predominantly left-lateralized patterns of neural activation for language processing, whereas native learners of ASL show extensive right hemisphere (RH) and LH activation. We demonstrate that the RH angular gyrus is active during ASL processing only in native signers (hearing, ASL-English bilinguals) but not in those who acquired ASL after puberty (hearing, native English speakers). This is the first demonstration of a 'sensitive' or 'critical' period for language in an RH structure. This has implications for language acquisition and for understanding age-related changes in neuroplasticity more generally.
诸如美国手语(ASL)之类的手语是与口语形式上相似的自然语言,因此为研究语言结构和模态对语言神经组织的影响提供了契机。以口语为母语的学习者在语言处理过程中,神经激活模式主要表现为左侧化,而以美国手语为母语的学习者则表现出广泛的右半球(RH)和左半球(LH)激活。我们证明,只有以手语为母语的人(听力正常的美国手语 - 英语双语者)在处理美国手语时右颞角回才会激活,而青春期后才习得美国手语的人(听力正常的以英语为母语者)则不会。这是首次在右半球结构中证明语言存在“敏感”或“关键”期。这对语言习得以及更广泛地理解与年龄相关的神经可塑性变化具有重要意义。