Hierarchical levels of representation in language prediction: The influence of first language acquisition in highly proficient bilinguals
Beta-band activity; Multilingualism; N200; Prediction; Reading
Adult
Male
Beta-band activity; Multilingualism; N200; Prediction; Reading;
Adolescent
4. Education
Brain
Electroencephalography
Multilingualism
Language Development
Young Adult
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Reading
Humans
Female
N200
Prediction
Beta-band activity
Comprehension
Evoked Potentials
Language
DOI:
10.1016/j.cognition.2017.03.012
Publication Date:
2017-04-03T18:25:48Z
AUTHORS (4)
ABSTRACT
Language comprehension is largely supported by predictive mechanisms that account for the ease and speed with which communication unfolds. Both native and proficient non-native speakers can efficiently handle contextual cues to generate reliable linguistic expectations. However, the link between the variability of the linguistic background of the speaker and the hierarchical format of the representations predicted is still not clear. We here investigate whether native language exposure to typologically highly diverse languages (Spanish and Basque) affects the way early balanced bilingual speakers carry out language predictions. During Spanish sentence comprehension, participants developed predictions of words the form of which (noun ending) could be either diagnostic of grammatical gender values (transparent) or totally ambiguous (opaque). We measured electrophysiological prediction effects time-locked both to the target word and to its determiner, with the former being expected or unexpected. Event-related (N200-N400) and oscillatory activity in the low beta-band (15-17Hz) frequency channel showed that both Spanish and Basque natives optimally carry out lexical predictions independently of word transparency. Crucially, in contrast to Spanish natives, Basque natives displayed visual word form predictions for transparent words, in consistency with the relevance that noun endings (post-nominal suffixes) play in their native language. We conclude that early language exposure largely shapes prediction mechanisms, so that bilinguals reading in their second language rely on the distributional regularities that are highly relevant in their first language. More importantly, we show that individual linguistic experience hierarchically modulates the format of the predicted representation.
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