Neural Correlates of Object-Extracted Relative Clause Processing Across English and Chinese

Author:

Dunagan Donald1ORCID,Stanojević Miloš2,Coavoux Maximin3ORCID,Zhang Shulin1ORCID,Bhattasali Shohini4ORCID,Li Jixing5ORCID,Brennan Jonathan6ORCID,Hale John12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Linguistics, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA

2. Google DeepMind, London, UK

3. Université Grenoble Alpes, Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS), Grenoble, France

4. Department of Language Studies, University of Toronto Scarborough, Toronto, ON, Canada

5. Department of Linguistics and Translation, City University of Hong Kong, Kowloon Tong, Hong Kong, China

6. Department of Linguistics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA

Abstract

Abstract Are the brain bases of language comprehension the same across all human languages, or do these bases vary in a way that corresponds to differences in linguistic typology? English and Mandarin Chinese attest such a typological difference in the domain of relative clauses. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging with English and Chinese participants, who listened to the same translation-equivalent story, we analyzed neuroimages time aligned to object-extracted relative clauses in both languages. In a general linear model analysis of these naturalistic data, comprehension was selectively associated with increased hemodynamic activity in left posterior temporal lobe, angular gyrus, inferior frontal gyrus, precuneus, and posterior cingulate cortex in both languages. This result suggests the processing of object-extracted relative clauses is subserved by a common collection of brain regions, regardless of typology. However, there were also regions that were activated uniquely in our Chinese participants albeit not to a significantly greater degree. These were in the temporal lobe. These Chinese-specific results could reflect structural ambiguity-resolution work that must be done in Chinese but not English object-extracted relative clauses.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

MIT Press

Subject

Neurology,Linguistics and Language

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3. Bilingual language switching in the laboratory versus in the wild: The spatiotemporal dynamics of adaptive language control;Blanco-Elorrieta;Journal of Neuroscience,2017

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