| Literature DB >> 24819196 |
Christos Pliatsikas1, Tom Johnstone2, Theodoros Marinis3.
Abstract
Behavioural evidence suggests that English regular past tense forms are automatically decomposed into their stem and affix (played = play+ed) based on an implicit linguistic rule, which does not apply to the idiosyncratically formed irregular forms (kept). Additionally, regular, but not irregular inflections, are thought to be processed through the procedural memory system (left inferior frontal gyrus, basal ganglia, cerebellum). It has been suggested that this distinction does not to apply to second language (L2) learners of English; however, this has not been tested at the brain level. This fMRI study used a masked-priming task with regular and irregular prime-target pairs (played-play/kept-keep) to investigate morphological processing in native and highly proficient late L2 English speakers. No between-groups differences were revealed. Compared to irregular pairs, regular pairs activated the pars opercularis, bilateral caudate nucleus and the right cerebellum, which are part of the procedural memory network and have been connected with the processing of morphologically complex forms. Our study is the first to provide evidence for native-like involvement of the procedural memory system in processing of regular past tense by late L2 learners of English.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24819196 PMCID: PMC4018348 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0097298
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Schematic representation of the masked priming task with example pairs per condition.
ISI: Interstimulus Intervals.
Accuracy % (SD) per group and per condition.
| NS | L2 | |
| Regular Morphology | 96.3 (3.9) | 95.6 (6.5) |
| Regular Unrelated | 96.3 (5) | 92.5 (8.4) |
| Irregular Morphology | 97.3 (3.8) | 95.3 (6.9) |
| Irregular Unrelated | 98.2 (2.9) | 95.0 (4.8) |
Mean RTs (SD) per group and per condition.
| NS | L2 | |||||
| Morphology | Unrelated | U-M | Morphology | Unrelated | U-M | |
| Regular | 538 (34) | 543 (42) | 5 | 580 (49) | 568 (39) | −12 |
| Irregular | 530 (41) | 553 (37) | 23** | 558 (42) | 601 (49) | 43** |
| I-R | −8 | 10 | −22* | 33** | ||
| * p<0.05** p<0.001 | ||||||
Significant peak activations of the combined group for the contrasts of interest.
| Contrast | hemi | region | Cluster size | Z | x | y | z |
| RM>IM | L | IFG oper. | 273 | 3.4 | −43.6 | 7.47 | 25 |
| L | IFG oper. | 236 | 4.14 | −46.1 | 9.92 | −0.247 | |
| R | caudate | 273 | 3.95 | 15.4 | 10.9 | 7.51 | |
| L | caudate | 124 | 2.85 | −12.5 | 6.98 | 8.7 | |
| R | cerebellum | 78 | 3.25 | 33.6 | −76.1 | −43.1 | |
| RM>RU | L | IFG oper. | 523 | 3.3 | −43.6 | 14.9 | 19.5 |
| IM>IU | L | cerebellum | 98 | 3.52 | −20.3 | −82 | −19.9 |
All coordinates in MNI space.
Cluster size is expressed in number of 3×3×4 mm voxels.
IFG oper: Inferior Frontal Gyrus, pars opercularis.
Figure 2Significant activations for the Regular Morphology > Irregular morphology contrast across the combined participant group.
From top to bottom: LIFG, bilateral basal ganglia, right cerebellum. The activations are expressed in GRF-corrected Z values. The bar charts illustrate percent signal change in brain activity per condition and per group (blue: L2, brown: NS) for each of the significantly activated clusters. The error bars represent the standard error of mean.