| Literature DB >> 28983152 |
He Pu1, Phillip J Holcomb1,2, Katherine J Midgley2.
Abstract
Research has shown neural changes following second language (L2) acquisition after weeks or months of instruction. But are such changes detectable even earlier than previously shown? The present study examines the electrophysiological changes underlying the earliest stages of second language vocabulary acquisition by recording event-related potentials (ERPs) within the first week of learning. Adult native English speakers with no previous Spanish experience completed less than four hours of Spanish vocabulary training, with pre- and post-training ERPs recorded to a backward translation task. Results indicate that beginning L2 learners show rapid neural changes following learning, manifested in changes to the N400 - an ERP component sensitive to lexicosemantic processing and degree of L2 proficiency. Specifically, learners in early stages of L2 acquisition show growth in N400 amplitude to L2 words following learning as well as a backward translation N400 priming effect that was absent pre-training. These results were shown within days of minimal L2 training, suggesting that the neural changes captured during adult second language acquisition are more rapid than previously shown. Such findings are consistent with models of early stages of bilingualism in adult learners of L2 (e.g. Kroll and Stewart's RHM) and reinforce the use of ERP measures to assess L2 learning.Entities:
Keywords: Backward translation priming; Bilingualism; ERP; N400; Second language acquisition
Year: 2016 PMID: 28983152 PMCID: PMC5625355 DOI: 10.1016/j.jneuroling.2016.05.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurolinguistics ISSN: 0911-6044 Impact factor: 1.710