Department of physiology, anatomy, and genetics, University of Oxford Oxford, UK ; Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research Orangeburg, NY, USA.
Department of physiology, anatomy, and genetics, University of Oxford Oxford, UK.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2014 Apr 24;8:249. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00249. eCollection 2014.
Behavioral and neuroimaging studies have provided evidence that reading is strongly left lateralized, and the degree of this pattern of functional lateralization can be indicative of reading competence. However, it remains unclear whether functional lateralization differs between the first (L1) and second (L2) languages in bilingual L2 readers. This question is particularly important when the particular script, or orthography, learned by the L2 readers is markedly different from their L1 script. In this study, we quantified functional lateralization in brain regions involved in visual word recognition for participants' L1 and L2 scripts, with a particular focus on the effects of L1-L2 script differences in the visual complexity and orthographic depth of the script. Two different groups of late L2 learners participated in an fMRI experiment using a visual one-back matching task: L1 readers of Japanese who learnt to read alphabetic English and L1 readers of English who learnt to read both Japanese syllabic Kana and logographic Kanji. The results showed weaker leftward lateralization in the posterior lateral occipital complex (pLOC) for logographic Kanji compared with syllabic and alphabetic scripts in both L1 and L2 readers of Kanji. When both L1 and L2 scripts were non-logographic, where symbols are mapped onto sounds, functional lateralization did not significantly differ between L1 and L2 scripts in any region, in any group. Our findings indicate that weaker leftward lateralization for logographic reading reflects greater requirement of the right hemisphere for processing visually complex logographic Kanji symbols, irrespective of whether Kanji is the readers' L1 or L2, rather than characterizing additional cognitive efforts of L2 readers. Finally, brain-behavior analysis revealed that functional lateralization for L2 visual word processing predicted L2 reading competency.
行为和神经影像学研究已经提供了证据,表明阅读强烈地偏向于左侧,并且这种功能侧化的程度可以指示阅读能力。然而,在双语 L2 阅读者中,第一语言(L1)和第二语言(L2)之间的功能侧化是否存在差异仍然不清楚。当 L2 阅读者所学的特定脚本或正字法与他们的 L1 脚本明显不同时,这个问题尤其重要。在这项研究中,我们量化了参与研究的参与者的 L1 和 L2 脚本的视觉单词识别所涉及的大脑区域的功能侧化,特别关注 L1-L2 脚本差异对脚本的视觉复杂性和正字法深度的影响。两组不同的晚期 L2 学习者参与了 fMRI 实验,使用视觉 1 次匹配任务:学习阅读字母英语的日语母语者和学习阅读日语音节 Kana 和汉字表意文字的英语母语者。结果表明,对于 L1 和 L2 阅读者的汉字来说,与音节和字母脚本相比,在后外侧枕叶复合体(pLOC)中,对于表意文字的汉字,左侧的侧化较弱。当 L1 和 L2 脚本都不是表意文字时,即符号映射到声音时,在任何组中,任何区域的 L1 和 L2 脚本之间的功能侧化都没有显著差异。我们的发现表明,对于表意文字阅读的较弱的左侧侧化反映了对于处理视觉复杂的表意文字汉字符号的右半球的更大需求,而不管汉字是否是读者的 L1 或 L2,而不是描述 L2 阅读者的额外认知努力。最后,大脑行为分析表明,L2 视觉单词处理的功能侧化预测了 L2 阅读能力。