Functional shifts (FSs) – morphosyntactically marked words evoking coherent but novel meanings – are ubiquitous in English and, specially, in Shakespearean literature. While their neural signatures have been explored in native speakers, no study has targeted foreign-language users, let alone comparing early and late bilinguals. Here, we administered a validated FS paradigm to subjects from both populations and evaluated time-frequency modulations evoked by FS and control sentences. Early bilinguals exhibited greater sensitivity towards FSs, indexed by reduced fronto-posterior theta-band oscillations across semantic- and structural-integration windows. Such oscillatory modulations may represent a key marker of age-of-acquisition effects during foreign-language wordplay processing.
Reading Shakespearean tropes in a foreign tongue: Age of L2 acquisition modulates neural responses to functional shifts / M.G. Vilas, M. Santilli, E. Mikulan, F. Adolfi, M. Martorell Caro, F. Manes, E. Herrera, L. Sedeno, A. Ibanez, A.M. Garcia. - In: NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA. - ISSN 0028-3932. - 124:(2019 Feb 18), pp. 79-86. [10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2019.01.007]
Reading Shakespearean tropes in a foreign tongue: Age of L2 acquisition modulates neural responses to functional shifts
M. SantilliSecondo
;E. Mikulan;
2019
Abstract
Functional shifts (FSs) – morphosyntactically marked words evoking coherent but novel meanings – are ubiquitous in English and, specially, in Shakespearean literature. While their neural signatures have been explored in native speakers, no study has targeted foreign-language users, let alone comparing early and late bilinguals. Here, we administered a validated FS paradigm to subjects from both populations and evaluated time-frequency modulations evoked by FS and control sentences. Early bilinguals exhibited greater sensitivity towards FSs, indexed by reduced fronto-posterior theta-band oscillations across semantic- and structural-integration windows. Such oscillatory modulations may represent a key marker of age-of-acquisition effects during foreign-language wordplay processing.Pubblicazioni consigliate
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