Similarities and differences in the neural representations of abstract concepts across English and Mandarin

被引:2
|
作者
Vargas, Robert [1 ]
Just, Marcel Adam [1 ]
机构
[1] Carnegie Mellon Univ, Dept Psychol, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA
关键词
abstract concepts; cross language; fMRI; MVPA; semantic; PORTUGUESE; LANGUAGES; SENTENCES;
D O I
10.1002/hbm.25844
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Recent research suggests there is a neural organization for representing abstract concepts that is common across English speakers. To investigate the possible role of language on the representation of abstract concepts, multivariate pattern analytic (MVPA) techniques were applied to fMRI data to compare the neural representations of 28 individual abstract concepts between native English and Mandarin speakers. Factor analyses of the activation patterns of the 28 abstract concepts from both languages characterized this commonality in terms of a set of four underlying neurosemantic dimensions, indicating the degree to which a concept is verbally represented, internal to the person, contains social content, and is rule-based. These common semantic dimensions (factors) underlying the 28 concepts provided a sufficient basis for reliably identifying the individual abstract concepts from their neural signature in the other language with a mean rank accuracy of 0.65 (p < .001). Although the neural dimensions used for representing abstract concepts are common across languages, differences in the meaning of some individual concepts can be accommodated in terms of differential salience of particular dimensions. These semantic dimensions constitute a set of neurocognitive resources for abstract concept representations within a larger set of regions responsible for general semantic processing.
引用
收藏
页码:3195 / 3206
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Concepts and measures related to connection to nature: Similarities and differences
    Tam, Kim-Pong
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2013, 34 : 64 - 78
  • [32] On similarities and differences between morphological concepts of linnaeus and goethe
    Korona, VV
    [J]. ZHURNAL OBSHCHEI BIOLOGII, 2002, 63 (03): : 227 - 235
  • [33] Emoji-based semantic representations for abstract and concrete concepts
    Wicke, Philipp
    Bolognesi, Marianna
    [J]. COGNITIVE PROCESSING, 2020, 21 (04) : 615 - 635
  • [34] Emoji-based semantic representations for abstract and concrete concepts
    Philipp Wicke
    Marianna Bolognesi
    [J]. Cognitive Processing, 2020, 21 : 615 - 635
  • [35] Similarities and differences in consumer value preferences for kinnows (Mandarin) in major cities of Pakistan
    Badar, Hammad
    Ghafoor, Abdul
    [J]. PAKISTAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES, 2021, 58 (06): : 1937 - 1942
  • [36] STRESS LEVELS IN ITALIAN AND ENGLISH - SOME SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES
    EUGENIO, A
    [J]. IRAL-INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF APPLIED LINGUISTICS IN LANGUAGE TEACHING, 1975, 13 (03): : 239 - 240
  • [37] How learning to abstract shapes neural sound representations
    Ley, Anke
    Vroomen, Jean
    Formisano, Elia
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE, 2014, 8
  • [38] Immersion and CLIL in English: more differences than similarities
    Lasagabaster, David
    Sierra, Juan Manuel
    [J]. ELT JOURNAL, 2010, 64 (04) : 367 - 375
  • [39] Asking questions in child English: Evidence for early abstract representations
    Pozzan, Lucia
    Valian, Virginia
    [J]. LANGUAGE ACQUISITION, 2017, 24 (03) : 209 - 233
  • [40] Concepts and Representations of Sovereignty on the English Renaissance Emblematic Stage
    Szonyi, Gyorgy E.
    [J]. IKON-JOURNAL OF ICONOGRAPHIC STUDIES, 2012, 5 : 207 - 216