info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Reading Shakespearean tropes in a foreign tongue: Age of L2 acquisition modulates neural responses to functional shifts
Fecha
2019-02Registro en:
Vilas, Martina G.; Santilli, Micaela; Mikulan, Ezequiel Pablo; Gonzalez Adolfi, Federico; Martorell Caro, Miguel Angel; et al.; Reading Shakespearean tropes in a foreign tongue: Age of L2 acquisition modulates neural responses to functional shifts; Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd; Neuropsychologia; 124; 2-2019; 79-86
0028-3932
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Vilas, Martina G.
Santilli, Micaela
Mikulan, Ezequiel Pablo
Gonzalez Adolfi, Federico
Martorell Caro, Miguel Angel
Manes, Facundo Francisco
Herrera, Eduar
Sedeño, Lucas
Ibañez, Agustin Mariano
García, Adolfo Martín
Resumen
Functional shifts (FSs) – morphosyntactically marked words evoking coherent but novel meanings – are ubiquitous in English and, specially, in Shakespearean literature. While their neural signatures have been explored in native speakers, no study has targeted foreign-language users, let alone comparing early and late bilinguals. Here, we administered a validated FS paradigm to subjects from both populations and evaluated time-frequency modulations evoked by FS and control sentences. Early bilinguals exhibited greater sensitivity towards FSs, indexed by reduced fronto-posterior theta-band oscillations across semantic- and structural-integration windows. Such oscillatory modulations may represent a key marker of age-of-acquisition effects during foreign-language wordplay processing.