Language Proficiency Entails Tuning Cortical Activity to Second Language Speech
Date
2021Author
Lizarazu, Mikel
Carreiras, Manuel
Bourguignon, Mathieu
Zarraga, Asier
Molinaro, Nicola
Metadata
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Mikel Lizarazu, Manuel Carreiras, Mathieu Bourguignon, Asier Zarraga, Nicola Molinaro, Language Proficiency Entails Tuning Cortical Activity to Second Language Speech, Cerebral Cortex, Volume 31, Issue 8, August 2021, Pages 3820–3831, https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhab051
Abstract
Cortical tracking of linguistic structures in speech, such as phrases (<3 Hz, delta band) and syllables (3–8 Hz, theta band), is
known to be crucial for speech comprehension. However, it has not been established whether this effect is related to
language proficiency. Here, we investigate how auditory cortical activity in second language (L2) learners tracked L2 speech.
Using magnetoencephalography, we recorded brain activity from participants listening to Spanish and Basque. Participants
were Spanish native (L1) language speakers studying Basque (L2) at the same language center at three different levels:
beginner (Grade 1), intermediate (Grade 2), and advanced (Grade 3).We found that 1) both delta and theta tracking to L2
speech in the auditory cortex were related to L2 learning proficiency and that 2) top-down modulations of activity in the left
auditory regions during L2 speech listening—by the left inferior frontal and motor regions in delta band and by the left
middle temporal regions in theta band—were also related to L2 proficiency. Altogether, these results indicate that the
ability to learn an L2 is related to successful cortical tracking of L2 speech and its modulation by neuronal oscillations in
higher-order cortical regions.