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Título
Ultra-rapid and automatic interplay between L1 and L2 semantics in late bilinguals: EEG evidence
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
EEG
ERP
Semantics
Lexical access
Word
Bilingualism
Crosslinguistic interaction
Cluster-based permutation
P50 (P1)
N400
N350
Fecha de publicación
2022
Editor
Elsevier
Resumen
[EN]Converging behavioral and neuroimaging evidence suggests parallel activation of native (L1) and second (L2) language codes in bilinguals, with the modulation of the N400 as the most likely neural correlate of such L1-L2 interplay at lexico-semantic level. However, this relatively late effect may reflect secondary controlled processes, in contrast to earlier modulations found in monolinguals (<200 msec) indicative of fast and automatic lexicosemantic L1 access, which has so far not been documented for bilingualism. To address this, we investigated early neurophysiological crosslinguistic activation during bilingual word access. EEG signals were recorded from a group of late bilinguals during a maskedpriming crosslinguistic task in which L1 (Russian) words were presented as subliminal primes for 50 msec before L2 (English) target words. Prime-target pairs matched either phonologically only, semantically only, both phonologically and semantically, or did not match. Cluster-based random permutation analyses revealed a main effect of semantic similarity at 40e60 msec over centro-posterior scalp sites, reflecting a negative-going shift of ERP amplitudes for semantically similar prime-target pairs. Importantly, neural source reconstruction showed activations within a left-hemispheric network comprising the middle and superior temporal cortex and the angular gyrus as the most likely neural substrate of this early semantic effect. Furthermore, analyses also revealed significant differences over frontocentral sites for the main effect of semantic and phonological similarity, ranging from 312 to 356 and 380e444 msec respectively, thus confirming previously described N400 crosslinguistic effects. Our findings confirm the existence of an integrated brain network for the bilingual lexicon and reveal the earliest (~50 msec) crosslinguistic effect reported so far, suggesting fast and automatic L1eL2 interplay, followed by later (possibly top-down controlled) processing stages.
URI
ISSN
0010-9452
DOI
10.1016/j.cortex.2022.03.004
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