Faculty of Psychology and Educational Science, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
Cortex. 2024 Sep;178:174-189. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2024.06.008. Epub 2024 Jul 1.
Learning words in the mother tongue is a fundamental lifelong skill that involves complex cognitive and neural changes. In adults, newly learned words affect the organization of the lexical-semantic network and, compared to words that have been in the lexicon for longer, they activate the same cortical areas, but more extensively and/or intensively. It is however still unclear (1) which brain and cognitive processes underlying word production change when infrequent/unknown words are compared before and after learning and (2) whether integrating newly learned words impacts word specific processes or has a broader impact on unlearned words. The present study aims to investigate the electrophysiological changes underlying the production of rare words induced by learning and the effect of learning on an unlearned list of rare words belonging to the same semantic categories. To this end, 24 neurotypical adults learned one of two matched lists of 40 concrete rare words from 4 semantic categories. EEG (electroencephalographic) recordings were acquired during a referential word production task (picture naming) of the learned and unlearned words before and after the learning phase. The results show that the production of rare word is associated with event-related (ERP) differences between before and after learning in the period from 300 to 800 msec following the presentation of the imaged concept (picture). These differences consisted in a larger involvement of left temporal and parietal regions after learning between 300 and 400 msec i.e., the time window likely corresponding to lexical and phonological encoding processes. Crucially, the ERP changes are not restricted to the production of the learned rare words, but are also observed when participants try to retrieve words of a list of semantically and lexically matched rare words that they have not learned. The ERP changes on unlearned rare words are weaker and suggest that learning new words induces boarder effects also on unlearned words.
学习母语中的单词是一项基本的终身技能,涉及复杂的认知和神经变化。在成年人中,新学习的单词会影响词汇语义网络的组织,与已经在词汇中存在更长时间的单词相比,它们会激活相同的皮质区域,但更广泛和/或强烈。然而,目前仍不清楚(1)在学习前后比较不常见/未知单词时,哪些大脑和认知过程会导致单词产生发生变化,以及(2)新学习的单词是否会影响特定单词的处理过程,或者对未学习的单词产生更广泛的影响。本研究旨在探讨学习过程中产生罕见单词的生产所涉及的电生理变化,以及学习对属于同一语义范畴的未学习罕见单词列表的影响。为此,24 名神经正常的成年人从 4 个语义类别中学习了两个匹配的 40 个具体罕见单词列表中的一个。在学习阶段前后,在参考单词生成任务(图片命名)中采集了脑电图(EEG)记录。结果表明,在呈现想象概念(图片)后的 300 至 800 毫秒期间,罕见单词的产生与事件相关(ERP)差异有关。这些差异包括在学习后 300 至 400 毫秒之间左颞叶和顶叶区域的更大参与,即可能对应词汇和语音编码过程的时间窗口。至关重要的是,ERP 变化不仅限于学习罕见单词的产生,而且在参与者尝试检索他们未学习的语义和词汇匹配的罕见单词列表中的单词时也会观察到。对未学习的罕见单词的 ERP 变化较弱,表明学习新单词也会对未学习的单词产生更广泛的影响。