Institutional Repository, Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences
What’s in a name? Brain activity reveals categorization processes differ across languages | |
Liu, Chao; Tardif, Twila; Mai, Xiaoqin; Gehring, William J.; Simms, Nina; Luo, Yue-Jia; Twila Tardif | |
通讯作者邮箱 | [email protected] |
心理所单位排序 | 3 |
其他摘要 | The linguistic relativity hypothesis proposes that speakers of different languages perceive and conceptualize the world differently, but do their brains reflect these differences? In English, most nouns do not provide linguistic clues to their categories, whereas most Mandarin Chinese nouns provide explicit category information, either morphologically (e g, the morpheme "vehicle" che1 (sic) in the noun "train" huo3che1 (sic)) or orthographically (e g, the radical "bug" chong2 (sic) in the character for the noun "butterfly" hu2dre2 (sic)). When asked to judge the membership of atypical (e g, train) vs typical (e.g., car) pictorial exemplars of a category (e g, vehicle), English speakers (N = 26) showed larger N300 and N400 event-related potential (ERP) component differences, whereas Mandarin speakers (N = 27) showed no such differences. Further investigation with Mandarin speakers only (N = 22) found that it was the morphologically transparent items that did not show a typicality effect, whereas orthographically transparent items elicited moderate N300 and N400 effects In a follow-up study with English speakers only (N = 25), morphologically transparent items also showed different patterns of N300 and N400 activation than nontransparent items even for English speakers Together, these results demonstrate that even for pictorial stimuli, how and whether category information is embedded in object names affects the extent to which typicality is used in category judgments, as shown in N300 and N400 responses. |
关键词 | event-related potentials mandarin Chinese categorization typicality effect N300 N400 morphological and orthographical processing linguistic relativity hypothesis crosscultural |
学科领域 | 认知神经科学 |
2010 | |
语种 | 英语 |
DOI | 10.1002/hbm.20974 |
发表期刊 | HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING |
卷号 | 31期号:11页码:1786-1801 |
URL | 查看原文 |
收录类别 | SCI |
资助项目 | NSF:BCS-0350272; NIH:TW000035-07S1; Ministry of Education (PCSIRT): IRT0710; NSF China: 30930031; Center for Human Growth and Development |
资助机构 | NSF:BCS-0350272; NIH:TW000035-07S1; Ministry of Education (PCSIRT): IRT0710; NSF China: 30930031; Center for Human Growth and Development |
引用统计 | |
文献类型 | 期刊论文 |
条目标识符 | http://ir.psych.ac.cn/handle/311026/10078 |
专题 | 中国科学院心理研究所回溯数据库(1956-2010) |
通讯作者 | Twila Tardif |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | Liu, Chao,Tardif, Twila,Mai, Xiaoqin,等. What’s in a name? Brain activity reveals categorization processes differ across languages[J]. HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING,2010,31(11):1786-1801. |
APA | Liu, Chao.,Tardif, Twila.,Mai, Xiaoqin.,Gehring, William J..,Simms, Nina.,...&Twila Tardif.(2010).What’s in a name? Brain activity reveals categorization processes differ across languages.HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING,31(11),1786-1801. |
MLA | Liu, Chao,et al."What’s in a name? Brain activity reveals categorization processes differ across languages".HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING 31.11(2010):1786-1801. |
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