Limited but specific engagement of the mature language network during linguistic statistical learning

Author:

Schneider Julie M12ORCID,Scott Terri L3,Legault Jennifer4,Qi Zhenghan256

Affiliation:

1. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Louisiana State University , 77 Hatcher Hall, Field House Dr., Baton Rouge, LA 70803 , United States

2. Department of Linguistics & Cognitive Science, University of Delaware , 125 E Main St, Newark, DE 19716 , United States

3. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Northeastern University , 360 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA, 02115, United States

4. Department of Psychology, Elizabethtown College , One Alpha Dr, Elizabethtown, PA 17022 , United States

5. Bouvé College of Health Sciences, Northeastern University , 360 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA 02115 , United States

6. Department of Psychology, Northeastern University , 105-107 Forsyth St., Boston, MA, 02115, United States

Abstract

Abstract Statistical learning (SL) is the ability to detect and learn regularities from input and is foundational to language acquisition. Despite the dominant role of SL as a theoretical construct for language development, there is a lack of direct evidence supporting the shared neural substrates underlying language processing and SL. It is also not clear whether the similarities, if any, are related to linguistic processing, or statistical regularities in general. The current study tests whether the brain regions involved in natural language processing are similarly recruited during auditory, linguistic SL. Twenty-two adults performed an auditory linguistic SL task, an auditory nonlinguistic SL task, and a passive story listening task as their neural activation was monitored. Within the language network, the left posterior temporal gyrus showed sensitivity to embedded speech regularities during auditory, linguistic SL, but not auditory, nonlinguistic SL. Using a multivoxel pattern similarity analysis, we uncovered similarities between the neural representation of auditory, linguistic SL, and language processing within the left posterior temporal gyrus. No other brain regions showed similarities between linguistic SL and language comprehension, suggesting that a shared neurocomputational process for auditory SL and natural language processing within the left posterior temporal gyrus is specific to linguistic stimuli.

Funder

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

National Science Foundation Directorate for Social, Behavioral & Economic Sciences

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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