Marian Viorica, Chabal Sarah, Bartolotti James, Bradley Kailyn, Hernandez Arturo E
Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, United States.
Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, United States.
Brain Lang. 2014 Dec;139:108-17. doi: 10.1016/j.bandl.2014.10.005. Epub 2014 Nov 19.
Behavioral research suggests that monolinguals and bilinguals differ in how they manage within-language phonological competition when listening to language. The current study explored whether bilingual experience might also change the neural resources recruited to control spoken-word competition. Seventeen Spanish-English bilinguals and eighteen English monolinguals completed an fMRI task in which they searched for a picture representing an aurally presented word (e.g., "candy") from an array of four presented images. On competitor trials, one of the objects in the display shared initial phonological overlap with the target (e.g., candle). While both groups experienced competition and responded more slowly on competitor trials than on unrelated trials, fMRI data suggest that monolinguals, but not bilinguals, activated executive control regions (e.g., anterior cingulate, superior frontal gyrus) during within-language phonological competition. We conclude that differences in how monolinguals and bilinguals manage competition may result from bilinguals' more efficient deployment of neural resources.
行为研究表明,单语者和双语者在听语言时处理语言内语音竞争的方式存在差异。当前的研究探讨了双语经历是否也可能改变用于控制口语单词竞争的神经资源。17名西班牙-英语双语者和18名英语单语者完成了一项功能磁共振成像任务,在该任务中,他们从一组四张呈现的图像中搜索一幅代表听觉呈现单词(如“糖果”)的图片。在有竞争干扰的试验中,展示中的一个物体与目标词在初始语音上有重叠(如“蜡烛”)。虽然两组在有竞争干扰的试验中都经历了竞争,且反应比无关试验时更慢,但功能磁共振成像数据表明,在语言内语音竞争期间,单语者而非双语者激活了执行控制区域(如前扣带回、额上回)。我们得出结论,单语者和双语者在处理竞争方式上的差异可能源于双语者对神经资源更有效的调配。