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Neural correlates of emotion-attention interactions: from perception, learning, and memory to social cognition, individual differences, and training interventions
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Second-language proficiency modulates the brain language control network in bilingual translators: An event-related fMRI study
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Language Control and Lexical Competition in Bilinguals: An Event-Related fMRI Study
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Opposite ERP effects for conscious and unconscious semantic processing under continuous flash suppression
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Semantic relatedness and first-second language effects in the bilingual brain: a brain mapping study
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Dissociation between goal-directed and discrete response localization in a patient with bilateral cortical blindness
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On the origin of the N400 effects: An ERP waveform and source localization analysis in three matching tasks
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Language Control and Lexical Competition in Bilinguals: An Event-Related fMRI Study
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Abutalebi, Jubin; Annoni, Jean-Marie; Zimine, Ivan; Pegna, Alan J.; Seghier, Mohamed L.; Lee-Jahnke, Hannelore; Lazeyras, François; Cappa, Stefano F.; Khateb, Asaid. - : Oxford University Press, 2008
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Abstract:
Language selection (or control) refers to the cognitive mechanism that controls which language to use at a given moment and context. It allows bilinguals to selectively communicate in one target language while minimizing the interferences from the nontarget language. Previous studies have suggested the participation in language control of different brain areas. However, the question remains whether the selection of one language among others relies on a language-specific neural module or general executive regions that also allow switching between different competing behavioral responses including the switching between various linguistic registers. In this functional magnetic resonance imaging study, we investigated the neural correlates of language selection processes in German–French bilingual subjects during picture naming in different monolingual and bilingual selection contexts. We show that naming in the first language in the bilingual context (compared with monolingual contexts) increased activation in the left caudate and anterior cingulate cortex. Furthermore, the activation of these areas is even more extended when the subjects are using a second weaker language. These findings show that language control processes engaged in contexts during which both languages must remain active recruit the left caudate and the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) in a manner that can be distinguished from areas engaged in intralanguage task switching.
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Keyword:
Articles
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URL: http://cercor.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/18/7/1496 https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhm182
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Language control and lexical competition in bilinguals: An event-related fMRI study
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Language Control and Lexical Competition in Bilinguals: An Event-Related fMRI Study
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Language selection in bilinguals: A spatio-temporal analysis of electric brain activity
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The time course of semantic category processing in the cerebral hemispheres: an electrophysiological study
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Spatio-temporal analysis of electric brain activity during semantic and phonological word processing
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Spatio-temporal analysis of electric brain activity during semantic and phonological word processing
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