Hemispheric dominance of metaphor processing for Chinese-English bilinguals : DVF and ERPs evidence
Zhu, X., Chen, H., Otieno, S. C., Cong, F., & Leppänen, P. H. (2022). Hemispheric dominance of metaphor processing for Chinese-English bilinguals : DVF and ERPs evidence. Journal of Neurolinguistics, 63, Article 101081. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jneuroling.2022.101081
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Journal of NeurolinguisticsDate
2022Copyright
© 2022 Elsevier Ltd.
This study investigated whether metaphors are predominantly processed in the right or left hemisphere when using Chinese and English metaphors in Chinese bilingual speakers. The role of familiarity in processing of metaphorical and literal expressions in both the first and second language was studied with brain-event-related potentials using a divided-visual-field paradigm. The participants were asked to perform plausibility judgments for Chinese (L1) and English (L2) familiar and unfamiliar metaphorical and literal sentences. The results obtained using parameter-free cluster permutation statistics suggest a different pattern of brain responses for metaphor processing in L1 and L2, and that both metaphoricity and familiarity have an effect on the brain response pattern of both Chinese and English metaphor processing. However, the brain responses were distributed bilaterally across hemispheres, suggesting no clear evidence for lateralization of processing of metaphorical meanings. This is inconsistent with the Graded Salience Hypothesis and Fine-Coarse Semantic Coding Theory, which posited a right hemisphere advantage of non-salient and coarse semantic processing.
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his study was funded by the National Social Science Fund of China [grant number 16BYY073, The Neural Correlates of L2 Metaphor Comprehension], and the China Scholarship Council [grant number 201806060168], and supported by University of Jyväskylä.License
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