| Literature DB >> 32274469 |
Evelyne Mercure1,2,3, Samuel Evans2,4, Laura Pirazzoli3,5, Laura Goldberg2, Harriet Bowden-Howl2,6, Kimberley Coulson-Thaker2,7, Indie Beedie2, Sarah Lloyd-Fox3,8, Mark H Johnson3,8, Mairéad MacSweeney2.
Abstract
Recent neuroimaging studies suggest that monolingual infants activate a left-lateralized frontotemporal brain network in response to spoken language, which is similar to the network involved in processing spoken and signed language in adulthood. However, it is unclear how brain activation to language is influenced by early experience in infancy. To address this question, we present functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) data from 60 hearing infants (4 to 8 months of age): 19 monolingual infants exposed to English, 20 unimodal bilingual infants exposed to two spoken languages, and 21 bimodal bilingual infants exposed to English and British Sign Language (BSL). Across all infants, spoken language elicited activation in a bilateral brain network including the inferior frontal and posterior temporal areas, whereas sign language elicited activation in the right temporoparietal area. A significant difference in brain lateralization was observed between groups. Activation in the posterior temporal region was not lateralized in monolinguals and bimodal bilinguals, but right lateralized in response to both language modalities in unimodal bilinguals. This suggests that the experience of two spoken languages influences brain activation for sign language when experienced for the first time. Multivariate pattern analyses (MVPAs) could classify distributed patterns of activation within the left hemisphere for spoken and signed language in monolinguals (proportion correct = 0.68; p = 0.039) but not in unimodal or bimodal bilinguals. These results suggest that bilingual experience in infancy influences brain activation for language and that unimodal bilingual experience has greater impact on early brain lateralization than bimodal bilingual experience.Entities:
Keywords: deaf; fNIRS; infant-directed language; infants; sign language; speech
Year: 2020 PMID: 32274469 PMCID: PMC7145445 DOI: 10.1162/nol_a_00001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurobiol Lang (Camb) ISSN: 2641-4368
Mullen Scales of Early Learning t scores in the receptive language, visual reception, fine motricity, and gross motricity scales in each group
| Monolinguals (n = 19) | Unimodal bilinguals (n = 20) | Bimodal bilinguals (n = 21) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Receptive language | 44.2 (12.8) [20–64] | 43.5 (11.9) [20–63] | 52.9 (10.5) [20–66] |
| Visual reception | 53.5 (12.2) [26–80] | 46.8 (11.1) [27–64] | 51.9 (12.1) [32–76] |
| Fine motricity | 51.7 (9.4) [26–64] | 46.6 (9.9) [27–64] | 51.6 (10.4) [26–68] |
| Gross motricity | 56.0 (10.8) [31–77] | 52.8 (8.1) [40–68] | 49.5 (9.9) [30–67] |
Group mean (standard deviation), [range].
Figure 1Stimuli and fNIRS measurement. A. Example of stimulus sequence and timings. B. Summary of experimental conditions and experimental design. C. Picture of infant wearing the NTS fNIRS headgear used in the current study. D. Illustration of channel location in relation to an infant’s head. Channels depicted in green are part of the inferior frontal region of interest, while channels depicted in yellow are part of the posterior temporal region of interest. E. Example of HbO2 and HHb grand averaged hemodynamic responses in a left posterior temporal channel in response to spoken language. Highlighted time windows represent periods of experimental stimulus and analyses.
Figure 2Activation for spoken language in (A) all infants, (B) monolinguals, (C) unimodal bilinguals, and (D) bimodal bilinguals. Red: Channels showing a significant increase in HbO2 in channel-by-channel analyses at the FDR-corrected level. Pink: Channels showing a significant increase in HbO2 in channel-by-channel analyses at an uncorrected statistical level of p < 0.05. Blue: Channels showing a significant decrease in HHb at an uncorrected statistical level of p < 0.05. No channel showed a significant HHb effect at an FDR-corrected level. Stars indicate a significant difference between a familiar (English) and an unfamiliar (French) spoken language at an uncorrected statistical level of p < 0.05.
Figure 3Activation for sign language in (A) all infants, (B) monolinguals, (C) unimodal bilinguals, and (D) bimodal bilinguals (D). Red: Channels showing a significant increase in HbO2 in channel-by-channel analyses at the FDR-corrected level. Pink: Channels showing a significant increase in HbO2 in channel-by-channel analyses at an uncorrected statistical level of p < 0.05. Blue: Channels showing a significant decrease in HHb at an uncorrected statistical level of p < 0.05. No channel showed a significant HHb effect at an FDR-corrected level. Stars indicate a significant difference between a familiar (BSL) and unfamiliar (LSFB) sign language at an uncorrected statistical level of p < 0.05. These familiarity effects were assessed only in the bimodal bilingual group given that both signed languages were unfamiliar to infants of the other groups.
Figure 4Mean variation in HbO2 in the inferior frontal and posterior temporal ROIs for each language modality in each group of infants. Error bars represent standard error.
Figure 5Classification accuracy for spoken versus signed language. Empirical proportion of correct classification for spoken versus signed language by MVPAs. Empirical proportion of correct classification is presented for all channels, left hemisphere channels, and right hemisphere channels in each group of infants. The dotted line represents chance level (0.5), short lines represent the upper bound of the 95% confidence interval, and stars represent classification models that are significantly more successful than chance.