fMRI Syntactic and Lexical Repetition Effects Reveal the Initial Stages of Learning a New Language.
Kirsten WeberMorten H ChristiansenKarl Magnus PeterssonPeter IndefreyPeter HagoortPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
Acquiring a second language entails learning how to interpret novel words and relations between words, and to integrate them with existing language knowledge. To investigate the brain mechanisms involved in this particularly human skill, we combined an artificial language learning task with a syntactic repetition paradigm. We show that the repetition of novel syntactic structures, as well as words in contexts, leads to repetition enhancement, whereas repetition of known structures results in repetition suppression. We thus propose that repetition enhancement might reflect a brain mechanism to build and strengthen a neural network to process novel syntactic regularities and novel words. Importantly, the results also indicate an overlap in neural mechanisms for native and new language constructions with sufficient structural similarities.