TY - JOUR
T1 - Anatomical variability in the cortical representation of first and second language
AU - Dehaene, Stanislas
AU - Dupoux, Emmanuel
AU - Mehler, Jacques
AU - Cohen, Laurent
AU - Paulesu, Eraldo
AU - Perani, Daniela
AU - Van De Moortele, Pierre Francois
AU - Lehéricy, Stéphane
AU - Le Bihan, Denis
PY - 1997
Y1 - 1997
N2 - FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging was used to assess inter-subject variability in the cortical representation of language comprehension processes. Moderately fluent French-English bilinguals were scanned while they listened to stories in their first language (L1 = French) or in a second language (L2 = English) acquired at school after the age of seven. In all subjects, listening to L1 always activated a similar set of areas in the left temporal lobe, clustered along the left superior temporal sulcus. Listening to L2, however, activated a highly variable network of left and right temporal and frontal areas, sometimes restricted only to right-hemispheric regions. These results support the hypothesis that first language acquisition relies on a dedicated left-hemispheric cerebral network, while late second language acquisition is not necessarily associated with a reproducible biological substrate. The postulated contribution of the right hemisphere to L2 comprehension is found to hold only on average, individual subjects varying from complete right lateralization to standard left lateralization for L2.
AB - FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging was used to assess inter-subject variability in the cortical representation of language comprehension processes. Moderately fluent French-English bilinguals were scanned while they listened to stories in their first language (L1 = French) or in a second language (L2 = English) acquired at school after the age of seven. In all subjects, listening to L1 always activated a similar set of areas in the left temporal lobe, clustered along the left superior temporal sulcus. Listening to L2, however, activated a highly variable network of left and right temporal and frontal areas, sometimes restricted only to right-hemispheric regions. These results support the hypothesis that first language acquisition relies on a dedicated left-hemispheric cerebral network, while late second language acquisition is not necessarily associated with a reproducible biological substrate. The postulated contribution of the right hemisphere to L2 comprehension is found to hold only on average, individual subjects varying from complete right lateralization to standard left lateralization for L2.
KW - Bilingualism Language
KW - Lateralization
KW - Speech
KW - Temporal lobe
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M3 - Article
C2 - 9427375
AN - SCOPUS:0031454307
VL - 8
SP - 3809
EP - 3815
JO - NeuroReport
JF - NeuroReport
SN - 0959-4965
IS - 17
ER -