TY - GEN
T1 - Phonological processing of Japanese Kanji and Chinese characters in bilingual Japanese
T2 - 14th IEEE International Conference on Mechatronics and Automation, ICMA 2017
AU - Yang, Jingjing
AU - Li, Xiujun
AU - Li, Qi
AU - Xiao, Xinwei
AU - Tong, Dan
AU - Wu, Qiong
AU - Wu, Jinglong
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank the people who participated in this study and the staff of Shengyang of Medical College Shengjing Hospital for their assistance with data collection. Afterwards, we gave them some science research expense. A part of this study was financially supported by international cooperation project of Jilin provincial science and technology department (KYC-JC-XM-2016-069) and Science and Technology Innovation fund of Changchun University of Science and Technology project (XJJLG-2016-18).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 IEEE.
PY - 2017/8/23
Y1 - 2017/8/23
N2 - Reading in a second language (L2) is a complex task that entails an interaction between L2 and the native language (L1). Previous studies have suggested that bilingual subjects recruit the neural system of their logographic L1 (Chinese) reading and apply it to alphabetic L2 (English) reading. These findings have lent strong support to the idea that language experience shapes the cortex. Whether languages of the same writing system such as Japanese Kanji and Chinese characters, would also utilize the same neural substrates is still unclear. In this study, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to visualize Japanese-Chinese bilinguals' brain activity in phonological processing of Japanese Kanji (L1) and Chinese characters (L2), two written languages with highly similar orthography. In the experiment, the subjects were asked to judge whether two Japanese Kanji (or Chinese characters) presented at the left and right side of the fixation point rhymed with each other. A font size decision task was used as a control task, where the subjects judged whether the two Japanese Kanji (or Chinese characters) had an identical physical size. Subjects indicated a positive response by pressing the key corresponding to the index finger and a negative response by pressing the key corresponding to the middle finger of their right hand. The result showed that our bilingual Japanese subjects have large overlaps in the neural substrates for phonological processing of both native and second language. Our finding supports the idea that the neural systems of second language reading are shaped by native language.
AB - Reading in a second language (L2) is a complex task that entails an interaction between L2 and the native language (L1). Previous studies have suggested that bilingual subjects recruit the neural system of their logographic L1 (Chinese) reading and apply it to alphabetic L2 (English) reading. These findings have lent strong support to the idea that language experience shapes the cortex. Whether languages of the same writing system such as Japanese Kanji and Chinese characters, would also utilize the same neural substrates is still unclear. In this study, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to visualize Japanese-Chinese bilinguals' brain activity in phonological processing of Japanese Kanji (L1) and Chinese characters (L2), two written languages with highly similar orthography. In the experiment, the subjects were asked to judge whether two Japanese Kanji (or Chinese characters) presented at the left and right side of the fixation point rhymed with each other. A font size decision task was used as a control task, where the subjects judged whether the two Japanese Kanji (or Chinese characters) had an identical physical size. Subjects indicated a positive response by pressing the key corresponding to the index finger and a negative response by pressing the key corresponding to the middle finger of their right hand. The result showed that our bilingual Japanese subjects have large overlaps in the neural substrates for phonological processing of both native and second language. Our finding supports the idea that the neural systems of second language reading are shaped by native language.
KW - Brain activation
KW - Chinese
KW - FMRI
KW - Network
KW - Orthographic
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U2 - 10.1109/ICMA.2017.8015970
DO - 10.1109/ICMA.2017.8015970
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85030313790
T3 - 2017 IEEE International Conference on Mechatronics and Automation, ICMA 2017
SP - 1098
EP - 1103
BT - 2017 IEEE International Conference on Mechatronics and Automation, ICMA 2017
PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
Y2 - 6 August 2017 through 9 August 2017
ER -