Presentations

Displaying 1 - 7 of 7
  • Nieuwland, M. S., Martin, A. E., & Carreiras, M. (2010). An event-related FMRI study on case and number agreement processing in native and proficient nonnative speakers of Basque. Poster presented at the Workshop on Neurobilingualism, Donostia, Spain.

    Abstract

    Differences in native and nonnative sentence processing may surface most clearly around parameters that are not shared between L1 and L2. We investigated whether differences between Spanish-Basque bilinguals exist in processing related to the particular constraints of the ergative-absolutive case system of Basque, which is not present in Spanish, but not in processing related to number agreement which occurs in both languages. In an event-related FMRI experiment, we tested this hypothesis by examining the cortical networks recruited for reading in Spanish-Basque bilinguals. Highly proficient nonnative and native speakers of Basque read sentences containing violations of ergative case assignment or violations of number agreement as well as correct sentences (e.g., “Gizonak lehiatilan jaso ditu sarrerek/sarrera/sarrerak goizean”, respectively, approximate translation: “The man at the box office has received the tickets-erg/ticket/tickets in the morning”) while performing an acceptability judgment task. Preliminary results (6 nonnative and 16 native speakers) showed that ergative case violations and number violations similarly elicited activation increases compared to correct sentences in the right inferior parietal lobule and the precuneus while number violations elicited additional activation increases in middle and inferior frontal cortex, consistent with reports for morphosyntactic agreement errors. Compared to native speakers, nonnative speakers engaged the medial prefrontal cortex more strongly while processing ergative case violations and number violations, suggesting that they engaged additional cognitive resources to arrive at the same behavioral outcome. These latter effects, however, did not seem to differ between the ergative case and number violations. Thus, our preliminary results support the hypothesis that while morphosyntactic processing is quantitatively different in the two groups, native and nonnative speakers do not show qualitatively different responses when processing morphosyntactic features that are specific of the L2.
  • Nieuwland, M. S. (2010). The online computation of relevance: Insights from electrophysiology. Talk presented at the Johannes Gutenberg-University. Mainz, Germany. 2010.
  • Nieuwland, M. S. (2010). The role of informativeness and real-world knowledge in language comprehension: A cognitive neuroscience perspective. Talk presented at the Institute for logic, language and information, university of the Basque country. Donostia, Spain. 2010.
  • Nieuwland, M. S., & Van Berkum, J. J. A. (2004). Discourse context can completely overrule lexical-semantic violations: Evidence from the N400. Poster presented at the 11th Annual Cognitive Neuroscience Society Meeting (SNS 2004), San Fransisco, USA.
  • Nieuwland, M. S., & Van Berkum, J. J. A. (2004). Discourse context can completely overrule lexical-semantic violations: Evidence from the N400. Poster presented at the Society for Text & Discourse (STD), Chicago, IL, USA.
  • Nieuwland, M. S., & Van Berkum, J. J. A. (2004). Testing the limits of the semantic illusion phenomenon: ERPs reveal temporary change deafness in discourse comprehension. Poster presented at the NWO Cognition Summer School, Doorwerth, the Netherlands.
  • Nieuwland, M. S., & Van Berkum, J. J. A. (2004). Testing the limits of the semantic illusion phenomenon: ERPs reveal temporary change deafness in discourse comprehension. Poster presented at the Endo-Neuro-Psycho Meeting, Doorwerth, the Netherlands.

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