Objective: The aim of this study is to evaluate variations in cortical activation in early and late Uygur-Chinese bilinguals from the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region of China. Methodology: During a semantic judgment task with visual stimulation by a single Chinese or Uygur word, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was performed. The fMRI data regarding activated cortical areas and volumes by both languages were analyzed. Results: The first language (L1) and second language (L2) activated language-related hemispheric regions, including the left inferior frontal and parietal cortices, and L1 specifically activated the left middle temporal gyrus. For both L1 and L2, cortical activation was greater in the left hemisphere, and there wa...
International audienceFunctional magnetic resonance imaging was used to assess inter-subject variabi...
A general finding in English seems to be that verbs are represented in left prefrontal region and no...
Previous neuroimaging research indicates that English verbs and nouns are represented in frontal and...
The cortical organization of language in bilinguals remains dis-puted. We studied 24 right-handed fl...
Brain activation underlying language processing in Chinese-English bilinguals was examined using fMR...
Reading in a second language (L2) is a complex task that entails an interaction between L2 and the n...
Existing cognitive and neural imaging studies have suggested a frontoparietal network of multiple, c...
A large body of previous neuroimaging studies suggests that multiple languages are processed and org...
Objectives To identify the cortical areas 4 engaged during Chinese word processing using functional ...
Of current interest is how variations in early language experience shape patterns of functional conn...
The present study explored the bilingual cognitive control mechanism by comparing Chinese-English bi...
The present study explored the bilingual cognitive control mechanism by comparing Chinese-English bi...
The study determined how spatiotemporal distribution of cortical activity to words in first and seco...
A recurrent question concerning the neural organization of language processing in bilinguals concern...
The present study explored the bilingual cognitive control mechanism by comparing Chinese-English bi...
International audienceFunctional magnetic resonance imaging was used to assess inter-subject variabi...
A general finding in English seems to be that verbs are represented in left prefrontal region and no...
Previous neuroimaging research indicates that English verbs and nouns are represented in frontal and...
The cortical organization of language in bilinguals remains dis-puted. We studied 24 right-handed fl...
Brain activation underlying language processing in Chinese-English bilinguals was examined using fMR...
Reading in a second language (L2) is a complex task that entails an interaction between L2 and the n...
Existing cognitive and neural imaging studies have suggested a frontoparietal network of multiple, c...
A large body of previous neuroimaging studies suggests that multiple languages are processed and org...
Objectives To identify the cortical areas 4 engaged during Chinese word processing using functional ...
Of current interest is how variations in early language experience shape patterns of functional conn...
The present study explored the bilingual cognitive control mechanism by comparing Chinese-English bi...
The present study explored the bilingual cognitive control mechanism by comparing Chinese-English bi...
The study determined how spatiotemporal distribution of cortical activity to words in first and seco...
A recurrent question concerning the neural organization of language processing in bilinguals concern...
The present study explored the bilingual cognitive control mechanism by comparing Chinese-English bi...
International audienceFunctional magnetic resonance imaging was used to assess inter-subject variabi...
A general finding in English seems to be that verbs are represented in left prefrontal region and no...
Previous neuroimaging research indicates that English verbs and nouns are represented in frontal and...