Sign and Spoken Language Processing Differences in the Brain: A Brief Review of Recent Research

被引:4
|
作者
Caldwell, Hayley Bree [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ South Australia, Cognit & Syst Neurosci Res Hub CSN RH, Sch Justice & Soc, Magill Campus, Magill, SA, Australia
关键词
Cognitive neuroscience; Language comprehension; Language production; N400; Parietal; Sign language; Spoken language; DEAF NATIVE SIGNERS; ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL EVIDENCE; CEREBRAL ORGANIZATION; CONSTITUENT STRUCTURE; TEMPORAL DYNAMICS; NEURAL SYSTEMS; LATE LEARNERS; LATERALIZATION; ACQUISITION; HEARING;
D O I
10.1177/09727531211070538
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Background: It is currently accepted that sign languages and spoken languages have significant processing commonalities. The evidence supporting this often merely investigates frontotemporal pathways, perisylvian language areas, hemispheric lateralization, and event-related potentials in typical settings. However, recent evidence has explored beyond this and uncovered numerous modality-dependent processing differences between sign languages and spoken languages by accounting for confounds that previously invalidated processing comparisons and by delving into the specific conditions in which they arise. However, these processing differences are often shallowly dismissed as unspecific to language. This review examined recent neuroscientific evidence for processing differences between sign and spoken language modalities and the arguments against these differences' importance. Key distinctions exist in the topography of the left anterior negativity (LAN) and with modulations of event-related potential (ERP) components like the N400. There is also differential activation of typical spoken language processing areas, such as the conditional role of the temporal areas in sign language (SL) processing. Importantly, sign language processing uniquely recruits parietal areas for processing phonology and syntax and requires the mapping of spatial information to internal representations. Additionally, modality-specific feedback mechanisms distinctively involve proprioceptive post-output monitoring in sign languages, contrary to spoken languages' auditory and visual feedback mechanisms. The only study to find ERP differences post-production revealed earlier lexical access in sign than spoken languages. Themes of temporality, the validity of an analogous anatomical mechanisms viewpoint, and the comprehensiveness of current language models were also discussed to suggest improvements for future research. Key message: Current neuroscience evidence suggests various ways in which processing differs between sign and spoken language modalities that extend beyond simple differences between languages. Consideration and further exploration of these differences will be integral in developing a more comprehensive view of language in the brain.
引用
收藏
页码:62 / 70
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] 25-year neuroimaging research on spoken language processing: a bibliometric analysis
    Zheng, Yuxuan
    Zhang, Boning
    FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE, 2024, 18
  • [32] Three-dimensional grammar in the brain: Dissociating the neural correlates of natural sign language and manually coded spoken language
    Jednorog, Katarzyna
    Bola, Lukasz
    Mostowski, Piotr
    Szwed, Marcin
    Boguszewski, Pawel M.
    Marchewka, Artur
    Rutkowski, Pawel
    NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2015, 71 : 191 - 200
  • [33] A Brief Review of Sign Language Recognition Methods and Cutting-edge Technologies
    Wu, Jialin
    Yang, Tao
    2024 5TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER ENGINEERING AND APPLICATION, ICCEA 2024, 2024, : 1233 - 1242
  • [34] Developmental differences of large-scale functional brain networks for spoken word processing
    Liu, Xin
    He, Yin
    Gao, Yue
    Booth, James R.
    Zhang, Lihuan
    Zhang, Shudong
    Lu, Chunming
    Liu, Li
    BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 2022, 231
  • [35] Brain Function Differences in Language Processing in Children and Adults with Autism
    Williams, Diane L.
    Cherkassky, Vladimir L.
    Mason, Robert A.
    Keller, Timothy A.
    Minshew, Nancy J.
    Just, Marcel Adam
    AUTISM RESEARCH, 2013, 6 (04) : 288 - 302
  • [36] A review of deep learning-based approaches to sign language processing
    Tan, Sihan
    Khan, Nabeela
    An, Zhaoyi
    Ando, Yoshitaka
    Kawakami, Rei
    Nakadai, Kazuhiro
    Advanced Robotics, 2024, 38 (23) : 1649 - 1667
  • [37] Mapping language function in the brain: a review of the recent literature
    Crafton, Robert E.
    Kido, Elissa
    Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2000, 30 (03) : 199 - 221
  • [38] Brain structural correlates of individual differences at low-to high-levels of the language processing hierarchy: A review of new approaches to imaging research
    Golestani, Narly
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BILINGUALISM, 2014, 18 (01) : 6 - 34
  • [39] Statistical models for networks A brief review of some recent research
    Wasserman, Stanley
    Robins, Garry
    Steinley, Douglas
    STATISTICAL NETWORK ANALYSIS: MODELS, ISSUES, AND NEW DIRECTIONS, 2007, 4503 : 45 - +
  • [40] Recent advances with cold plasma technology for millet processing: A brief review
    Balendran, Susindra Devi
    Kalaivendan, Ranjitha Gracy T.
    Theagarajan, Radhika
    JOURNAL OF FOOD PROCESS ENGINEERING, 2024, 47 (01)