Vingerhoets Guy, Van Borsel John, Tesink Cathelijne, van den Noort Maurits, Deblaere Karel, Seurinck Ruth, Vandemaele Pieter, Achten Eric
Laboratory for Neuropsychology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Neuroimage. 2003 Dec;20(4):2181-96. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2003.07.029.
To investigate the hypothesis that in multilingual speakers different languages are represented in distinct brain regions, 12 multilingual right-handed men performed a word fluency task, a picture naming task, a comprehension reading task, and their respective control tasks in three languages (Dutch, French, and English) while whole-head functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was applied. In general, all language tasks revealed predominantly overlapping regions of activation for the different languages. Cerebral activation during use of the foreign languages showed a tendency toward a more extensive recruitment of the areas activated in the native language and the activation of a greater number of regions. Word generation in the foreign languages elicited additional bilateral inferior frontal activation, including Broca's area and left middle temporal gyrus activation; in the native language, additional postcentral activation was found. Picture naming in the foreign languages recruited additional inferior-lateral and medial frontal regions predominantly on the left, and more posterior right hemispheric activation in the mother tongue. During comprehension reading there was more activation in medial posterior regions in the native language. Our results suggest that the performance of language tasks in different languages engages largely the same cerebral areas but that the brain, to perform at a comparable proficiency level, engages more neural substrates for later acquired languages. Our findings do not support the view that languages learned later in life entail more right hemispheric involvement. Finally, a consequent effect of language exposure was found for reading, where increased familiarity engages more occipital activation whereas decreased familiarity appears to be associated with increased left hemispheric inferior frontal activation.
为了探究多语言使用者的不同语言在大脑不同区域表征的假设,12名右利手的多语言男性在进行全脑功能磁共振成像(fMRI)时,用三种语言(荷兰语、法语和英语)完成了一项词语流畅性任务、一项图片命名任务、一项阅读理解任务以及各自对应的控制任务。总体而言,所有语言任务均显示不同语言的激活区域主要重叠。使用外语时的大脑激活表现出一种趋势,即相较于母语,会更多地募集母语激活区域,且激活的区域数量更多。外语的词语生成引发了额外的双侧额下回激活,包括布洛卡区和左侧颞中回激活;而母语则发现了额外的中央后回激活。外语的图片命名主要在左侧募集了额外的下外侧和内侧额叶区域,而母语则在右半球后部有更多激活。阅读理解时,母语在中后部区域有更多激活。我们的结果表明,不同语言的语言任务表现主要涉及相同的脑区,但大脑为了以相当的熟练程度执行任务,会为后习得的语言动用更多的神经基质。我们的发现不支持晚年习得的语言更多涉及右半球的观点。最后,发现了语言接触对阅读的后续影响,即熟悉度增加会使枕叶激活更多,而熟悉度降低似乎与左侧额下回激活增加有关。