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1.
J Child Lang ; 46(5): 955-979, 2019 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31287034

ABSTRACT

The current study investigates how bilingual children encode and produce morphologically complex words. We employed a silent-production-plus-delayed-vocalization paradigm in which event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were recorded during silent encoding of inflected words which were subsequently cued to be overtly produced. The bilingual children's spoken responses and their ERPs were compared to previous datasets from monolingual children on the same task. We found an enhanced negativity for regular relative to irregular forms during silent production in both bilingual children's languages, replicating the ERP effect previously obtained from monolingual children. Nevertheless, the bilingual children produced more morphological errors (viz. over-regularizations) than monolingual children. We conclude that mechanisms of morphological encoding (as measured by ERPs) are parallel for bilingual and monolingual children, and that the increased over-regularization rates are due to their reduced exposure to each of the two languages (relative to monolingual children).

2.
PLoS One ; 13(7): e0199897, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30044825

ABSTRACT

One important organizational property of morphology is competition. Different means of expression are in conflict with each other for encoding the same grammatical function. In the current study, we examined the nature of this control mechanism by testing the formation of comparative adjectives in English during language production. Event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were recorded during cued silent production, the first study of this kind for comparative adjective formation. We specifically examined the ERP correlates of producing synthetic relative to analytic comparatives, e.g. angrier vs. more angry. A frontal, bilaterally distributed, enhanced negative-going waveform for analytic comparatives (vis-a-vis synthetic ones) emerged approximately 300ms after the (silent) production cue. We argue that this ERP effect reflects a control mechanism that constrains grammatically-based computational processes (viz. more comparative formation). We also address the possibility that this particular ERP effect may belong to a family of previously observed negativities reflecting cognitive control monitoring, rather than morphological encoding processes per se.


Subject(s)
Evoked Potentials , Linguistics , Speech Perception , Adult , Brain/physiology , Female , Humans , Male
3.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove) ; 71(5): 1125-1133, 2018 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28335663

ABSTRACT

Do properties of individual languages shape the mechanisms by which they are processed? By virtue of their non-concatenative morphological structure, the recognition of complex words in Semitic languages has been argued to rely strongly on morphological information and on decomposition into root and pattern constituents. Here, we report results from a masked priming experiment in Hebrew in which we contrasted verb forms belonging to two morphological classes, Paal and Piel, which display similar properties, but crucially differ on whether they are extended to novel verbs. Verbs from the open-class Piel elicited familiar root priming effects, but verbs from the closed-class Paal did not. Our findings indicate that, similarly to other (e.g., Indo-European) languages, down-to-the-root decomposition in Hebrew does not apply to stems of non-productive verbal classes. We conclude that the Semitic word processor is less unique than previously thought: Although it operates on morphological units that are combined in a non-linear way, it engages the same universal mechanisms of storage and computation as those seen in other languages.


Subject(s)
Language , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Semantics , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Perceptual Masking , Photic Stimulation , Psycholinguistics , Reaction Time/physiology , Regression Analysis , Visual Perception , Vocabulary , Young Adult
4.
J Child Lang ; 44(2): 427-456, 2017 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27018576

ABSTRACT

This study reports developmental changes in morphological encoding across late childhood. We examined event-related brain potentials (ERPs) during the silent production of regularly vs. irregularly inflected verb forms (viz. -t vs. -n participles of German) in groups of eight- to ten-year-olds, eleven- to thirteen-year-olds, and adults. The adult data revealed an enhanced (right-frontal) negativity 300-450 ms after cue onset for the (silent) production of -t relative to -n past participle forms (e.g. geplant vs. gehauen 'planned' vs. 'hit'). For the eleven- to thirteen-year-olds, the same enhanced negativity was found, with a more posterior distribution and a longer duration (=300-550 ms). The eight- to ten-year-olds also showed this negativity, again with a posterior distribution, but with a considerably delayed onset (800-1,000 ms). We suggest that this negativity reflects combinatorial processing required for producing -t participles in both children and adults and that the spatial and temporal modulations of this ERP effect across the three participant groups are due to developmental changes of the brain networks involved in processing morphologically complex words.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Language Development , Language , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Speech , Young Adult
5.
Europace ; 19(12): 2036-2041, 2017 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28007749

ABSTRACT

AIMS: The subcutaneous cardioverter defibrillator was designed to overcome electrode complications of transvenous defibrillation systems. While largely achieved, pocket complications have increased. Subcutaneous implantation of the pulse generator leaves it prone to erosion, extrusion, discomfort, and poor cosmesis. METHODS AND RESULTS: We use a demonstration electrode and pulse generator with fluoroscopy, prior to prepping and draping, to maximize the left ventricular mass between them. We adapted a submuscular abdominal ICD technique to implant the S-ICD intermuscularly between the anterior surface of serratus anterior and the posterior surface of latissimus dorsi. Surgery in our patients beyond the subcutaneous tissue was bloodless, as muscle layers were carefully separated but not incised, which also protected the long thoracic nerve. Two layers of muscle protect the pulse generator. We have implanted 82 consecutive patients with this technique, taking ∼65 min. All patients were converted with 65 J standard polarity shock during induced arrhythmia conversion testing, with six (7.3%) patients requiring a repositioning of the pulse generator prior to successful conversion. Seven spontaneous episodes of ventricular fibrillation were detected in three (3.6%) patients, all successfully converted back to sinus rhythm. Long-term patient outcomes have been good with low complication rates over the mean ± standard deviation 3.6 ± 1.2 years. CONCLUSION: Our intermuscular technique and implant methodology is successful for placement of the subcutaneous defibrillator pulse generator. Our technique leads to an excellent cosmetic result and high levels of patient satisfaction. Rates of first shock conversion during defibrillation testing, inappropriate shocks, and complications during follow-up compare favourably with previous published case series. There were no left arm movement limitations post-operatively.


Subject(s)
Arrhythmias, Cardiac/therapy , Defibrillators, Implantable , Electric Countershock/instrumentation , Intermediate Back Muscles/surgery , Prosthesis Implantation/methods , Superficial Back Muscles/surgery , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Arrhythmias, Cardiac/diagnosis , Arrhythmias, Cardiac/physiopathology , Electric Countershock/adverse effects , Electrocardiography , Female , Humans , Intermediate Back Muscles/diagnostic imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Patient Satisfaction , Prospective Studies , Prosthesis Design , Prosthesis Failure , Prosthesis Implantation/adverse effects , Superficial Back Muscles/diagnostic imaging , Time Factors , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Treatment Outcome , Young Adult
6.
Front Psychol ; 7: 316, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27065895

ABSTRACT

The current study investigates to what extent masked morphological priming is modulated by language-particular properties, specifically by its writing system. We present results from two masked priming experiments investigating the processing of complex Japanese words written in less common (moraic) scripts. In Experiment 1, participants performed lexical decisions on target verbs; these were preceded by primes which were either (i) a past-tense form of the same verb, (ii) a stem-related form with the epenthetic vowel -i, (iii) a semantically-related form, and (iv) a phonologically-related form. Significant priming effects were obtained for prime types (i), (ii), and (iii), but not for (iv). This pattern of results differs from previous findings on languages with alphabetic scripts, which found reliable masked priming effects for morphologically related prime/target pairs of type (i), but not for non-affixal and semantically-related primes of types (ii), and (iii). In Experiment 2, we measured priming effects for prime/target pairs which are neither morphologically, semantically, phonologically nor - as presented in their moraic scripts-orthographically related, but which-in their commonly written form-share the same kanji, which are logograms adopted from Chinese. The results showed a significant priming effect, with faster lexical-decision times for kanji-related prime/target pairs relative to unrelated ones. We conclude that affix-stripping is insufficient to account for masked morphological priming effects across languages, but that language-particular properties (in the case of Japanese, the writing system) affect the processing of (morphologically) complex words.

8.
Dev Cogn Neurosci ; 12: 51-60, 2015 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25541272

ABSTRACT

A widely studied morphological phenomenon in psycholinguistic research is the plurals-inside-compounds effect in English, which is the avoidance of regular plural modifiers within compounds (e.g., *rats hunter). The current study employs event-related brain potentials (ERPs) to investigate the production of plurals-inside-compounds in children and adults. We specifically examined the ERP correlates of producing morphologically complex words in 8-year-olds, 12-year-olds and adults, by recording ERPs during the silent production of compounds with plural or singular modifiers. Results for both children and adults revealed a negativity in response to compounds produced from regular plural forms when compared to compounds formed from irregular plurals, indicating a highly specific brain response to a subtle linguistic contrast. Although children performed behaviourally with an adult-like pattern in the task, we found a broader distribution and a considerably later latency in children's brain potentials than in adults', indicating that even in late childhood the brain networks involved in language processing are subject to subtle developmental changes.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Evoked Potentials , Language Development , Language , Linguistics , Adult , Child , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Female , Humans , Male
9.
Clin Linguist Phon ; 28(9): 709-21, 2014 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24588469

ABSTRACT

This study investigates verbal morphology in Specific Language Impairment (SLI) in German, focusing on past participle inflection. Longitudinal data from 12 German-speaking children with SLI, six monolingual and six Turkish-German sequential bilingual children, were examined, plus an additional group of six typically developing Turkish-German sequential bilingual children. In a recent study (Rothweiler, M., Chilla, S., & H. Clahsen. (2012). Subject verb agreement in Specific Language Impairment: A study of monolingual and bilingual German-speaking children. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 15, 39-57), the same children with SLI were found to be severely impaired in reliably producing correct agreement-marked verb forms. By contrast, the new results reported in this study show that both the monolingual and the bilingual children with SLI produce participle inflection according to their language age. Our results strengthen the case of difficulties with agreement as a linguistic marker of SLI in German and show that it is possible to identify SLI from an early sequential bilingual child's performance in one of her two languages.


Subject(s)
Language Development Disorders/diagnosis , Multilingualism , Phonetics , Semantics , Speech Acoustics , Age Factors , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Germany , Humans , Linguistics , Male , Reference Values , Speech Production Measurement , Turkey/ethnology
10.
J Child Lang ; 41(6): 1305-33, 2014 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24238607

ABSTRACT

Regular and irregular inflection in children's production has been examined in many previous studies. Yet, little is known about the processes involved in children's recognition of inflected words. To gain insight into how children process inflected words, the current study examines regular -t and irregular -n participles of German using the cross-modal priming technique testing 108 monolingual German-speaking children in two age groups (group I, mean age: 8;4, group II, mean age: 9;9) and a control group of 72 adults. Although both age groups of children had the same full priming effect as adults for -t forms, only children of age group II showed an adult-like (partial) priming effect for -n participles. We argue that children (within the age range tested) employ the same mechanisms for regular inflection as adults but that the lexical retrieval processes required for irregular forms become more efficient when children get older.


Subject(s)
Child Language , Adult , Child , Female , Germany , Humans , Language , Male , Middle Aged , Speech Perception , Young Adult
11.
Brain Res ; 1543: 223-34, 2014 Jan 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24161829

ABSTRACT

This study uses event-related brain potentials (ERPs) to investigate the temporal sequencing of structural (grammatical) and lexical (semantic) properties of complex words during language comprehension. Morphologically complex words do not only consist of stems and affixes (e.g., 'feel'+'-s'), but affixes also contain grammatical structure, viz. feature bundles specifying their morpho-syntactic functions (e.g., -s= [3rd person, singular, present tense]). We examined inflected adjectives of German, which consist of an unaltered stem plus a portmanteau affix encoding case, number and gender. The same group of 24 adult native speakers was tested in two cross-modal ERP priming experiments separately studying effects of lexical-semantic relatedness and related affixes. The results of these experiments revealed clearly distinct brain potentials. Prime-target overlap with respect to morpho-syntactic features was associated with a reduced positivity, whereas lexical-level priming led to a reduced negativity. The former was most pronounced between 200 and 300 ms and the latter in a later time window, between 300 and 400 ms. We interpret the reduced early positivity as reflecting ease of grammatical processing effort in case of primed (relative to unprimed) morpho-syntactic features and the reduced negativity as signaling facilitation in lexical retrieval for primed (compared to unprimed) words. Our ERP results indicate that grammatical information becomes available earlier than semantic information providing support for structure-first models of language processing.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Semantics , Speech Perception/physiology , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Electroencephalography , Female , Humans , Male , Photic Stimulation , Reaction Time/physiology , Young Adult
12.
Cognition ; 129(2): 457-69, 2013 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24007920

ABSTRACT

Many previous studies have shown that the human language processor is capable of rapidly integrating information from different sources during reading or listening. Yet, little is known about how this ability develops from child to adulthood. To gain insight into how children (in comparison to adults) handle different kinds of linguistic information during on-line language comprehension, the current study investigates a well-known morphological phenomenon that is subject to both structural and semantic constraints, the plurals-in-compounds effect, i.e. the dislike of plural (specifically regular plural) modifiers inside compounds (e.g. rats eater). We examined 96 seven-to-twelve-year-old children and a control group of 32 adults measuring their eye-gaze changes in response to compound-internal plural and singular forms. Our results indicate that children rely more upon structural properties of language (in the present case, morphological cues) early in development and that the ability to efficiently integrate information from multiple sources takes time for children to reach adult-like levels.


Subject(s)
Child Development/physiology , Comprehension/physiology , Language Development , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Child , Eye Movement Measurements , Eye Movements , Female , Humans , Language , Male , Middle Aged , Speech Perception/physiology , Young Adult
13.
Brain Lang ; 127(3): 345-55, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23398779

ABSTRACT

The current study examines the neural correlates of 8-to-12-year-old children and adults producing inflected word forms, specifically regular vs. irregular past-tense forms in English, using a silent production paradigm. ERPs were time-locked to a visual cue for silent production of either a regular or irregular past-tense form or a 3rd person singular present tense form of a given verb (e.g., walked/sang vs. walks/sings). Subsequently, another visual stimulus cued participants for an overt vocalization of their response. ERP results for the adult group revealed a negativity 300-450ms after the silent-production cue for regular compared to irregular past-tense forms. There was no difference in the present form condition. Children's brain potentials revealed developmental changes, with the older children demonstrating more adult-like ERP responses than the younger ones. We interpret the observed ERP responses as reflecting combinatorial processing involved in regular (but not irregular) past-tense formation.


Subject(s)
Evoked Potentials/physiology , Language Development , Language , Speech/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Electroencephalography , Female , Humans , Male , Young Adult
14.
Eur Cell Mater ; 23: 94-101; discussion 101-2, 2012 Feb 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22354460

ABSTRACT

Tendon rupture is a common injury. Inadequate endogenous repair often leaves patients symptomatic, with tendons susceptible to re-rupture. Administration of certain growth factors improves tendon healing in animal models, but their delivery remains a challenge. Here we evaluated the delivery of TGF-ß1 to tendon defects by the implantation of genetically modified muscle grafts. Rat muscle biopsies were transduced with recombinant adenovirus encoding TGF-ß1 and grafted onto surgically transected Achilles tendons in recipient animals. Tissue regenerates were compared to those of controls by biomechanical testing as well as histochemical and immunohistochemical analyses. Healing was greatly accelerated when genetically modified grafts were implanted into tendon defects, with the resulting repair tissue gaining nearly normal histological appearance as early as 2 weeks postoperatively. This was associated with decreased deposition of type III collagen in favour of large fibre bundles indicative of type I collagen. These differences in tendon composition coincided with accelerated restoration of mechanical strength. Tendon thickness increased in gene-treated animals at weeks 1 and 2, but by week 8 became significantly lower than that of controls suggesting accelerated remodelling. Thus localised TGF-ß1 delivery via adenovirus-modified muscle grafts improved tendon healing in this rat model and holds promise for clinical application.


Subject(s)
Achilles Tendon/surgery , Genetic Therapy , Muscle, Skeletal/transplantation , Tendon Injuries/surgery , Transforming Growth Factor beta1/administration & dosage , Transforming Growth Factor beta1/genetics , Adenoviridae , Animals , Collagen Type I/metabolism , Collagen Type III/metabolism , DNA, Complementary , Humans , Male , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Rupture , Stress, Mechanical , Tendon Injuries/metabolism , Transduction, Genetic , Wound Healing
15.
Brain Lang ; 120(3): 332-44, 2012 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22169628

ABSTRACT

This study investigates brain potentials to derived word forms in Spanish. Two experiments were performed on derived nominals that differ in terms of their productivity and semantic properties but are otherwise similar, an acceptability judgment task and a reading experiment using event-related brain potentials (ERPs) in which correctly and incorrectly formed derived words were presented in sentence contexts. The first experiment indicated productivity differences between the different nominalization processes in Spanish. The second experiment yielded a pattern of ERP responses that differed from both the familiar lexical-semantic and grammatical ERP effects. Violations of derivational morphology elicited an increased N400 component plus a late positivity (P600), unlike gender-agreement violations, which produced the biphasic LAN/P600 ERP pattern known from previous studies of morpho-syntactic violations. We conclude that the recognition of derived word forms engages both word-level (lexical-semantic) and decompositional (morpheme-based) processes.


Subject(s)
Evoked Potentials, Auditory/physiology , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Semantics , Vocabulary , Adolescent , Adult , Brain Mapping , Female , Humans , Judgment/physiology , Language , Male , Middle Aged , Psycholinguistics , Reaction Time/physiology , Young Adult
16.
Clin Linguist Phon ; 24(11): 870-82, 2010 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20964505

ABSTRACT

This study investigates the ability of a group of eight Greek-speaking adolescents with Down Syndrome (DS) (aged 12.1-18.7) to handle the perfective past tense using an acceptability judgement task. The performance of the DS participants was compared with that of 16 typically-developing children whose chronological age was matched with the mental age of the DS group. For existing verbs, both groups showed high accuracy scores for the sigmatic past tense whilst for (potential but non-existing) nonce verbs the DS group performed differently from the controls. Specifically, their judgements were unaffected by a nonce verb's similarity to existing verbs, unlike those of the controls, suggesting that the DS participants were less reliant on similarity-based generalisations when encountering a nonce word than the controls. Apart from that, it was found that people with DS did not show any kind of morphological impairment, replicating previous findings on past tense production in DS.


Subject(s)
Down Syndrome/complications , Language Development Disorders/etiology , Language Development , Language , Linguistics , Adolescent , Child , Female , Greece , Humans , Male
17.
Cognition ; 112(1): 187-94, 2009 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19433324

ABSTRACT

Does the language processing system make use of abstract grammatical categories and representations that are not directly visible from the surface form of a linguistic expression? This study examines stem-formation processes and conjugation classes, a case of 'pure' morphology that provides insight into the role of grammatical structure in language processing. We report results from a cross-modal priming experiment examining 1st and 3rd conjugation verb forms in Portuguese. Although items were closely matched with respect to a range of non-morphological factors, distinct priming patterns were found for 1st and 3rd conjugation stems. We attribute the observed priming patterns to different representations of conjugational stems, combinatorial morphologically structured ones for 1st conjugation and un-analyzed morphologically unstructured ones for 3rd conjugation stems. Our findings underline the importance of morphology for language comprehension indicating that morphological analysis goes beyond the identification of grammatical morphemes.


Subject(s)
Cues , Speech Perception/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans , Language , Male , Psycholinguistics , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Reaction Time/physiology , Young Adult
18.
J Psycholinguist Res ; 38(3): 305-19, 2009 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19337839

ABSTRACT

This article presents a selective overview of studies that have investigated auditory language processing in children and late second-language (L2) learners using online methods such as event-related potentials (ERPs), eye-movement monitoring, or the cross-modal priming paradigm. Two grammatical phenomena are examined in detail, children's and adults' processing of German plural inflections (Lück et al. Brain Res 1077:144-152, 2006; Hahne et al. J Cognitive Neurosci 18:121-134, 2006; Clahsen et al. J Child Language 34:601-622, 2007) and language learners' processing of filler-gap dependencies in English (Felser C, Roberts L Second Language Res 23:9-36, 2007; Roberts et al. J Psycholinguist Res 36:175-188, 2007). The results from these studies reveal clear differences between native and nonnative processing in both domains of grammar, suggesting that nonnative listeners rely less on grammatical parsing routines during processing than either child or adult native listeners. We also argue that factors such as slower processing speed or cognitive resource limitations only provide a partial account of our findings.


Subject(s)
Learning , Multilingualism , Semantics , Speech Perception , Adult , Brain/physiology , Child , Child Language , Child, Preschool , Cues , Evoked Potentials , Eye Movement Measurements , Humans , Neuropsychological Tests , Reaction Time , Speech , Speech Acoustics , Speech Perception/physiology
19.
J Child Lang ; 36(1): 113-42, 2009 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18778530

ABSTRACT

This study examines the perfective past tense of Greek in an elicited production and an acceptability judgment task testing 35 adult native speakers and 154 children in six age groups (age range: 3 ; 5 to 8 ; 5) on both existing and novel verb stimuli. We found a striking contrast between sigmatic and non-sigmatic perfective past tense forms. Sigmatic forms (which have a segmentable perfective affix (-s-) in Greek) were widely generalized to different kinds of novel verbs in both children and adults and were overgeneralized to existing non-sigmatic verbs in children's productions. By contrast, non-sigmatic forms were only extended to novel verbs that were similar to existing non-sigmatic verbs, and overapplications of non-sigmatic forms to existing sigmatic verbs were extremely rare. We argue that these findings are consistent with dual-mechanism accounts of morphology.


Subject(s)
Child Language , Linguistics , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Male , Speech , Young Adult
20.
J Child Lang ; 34(3): 601-22, 2007 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17822141

ABSTRACT

This study examines the mental processes involved in children's on-line recognition of inflected word forms using event-related potentials (ERPs). Sixty children in three age groups (20 six- to seven-year-olds, 20 eight- to nine-year-olds, 20 eleven- to twelve-year-olds) and 23 adults (tested in a previous study) listened to sentences containing correct or incorrect German noun plural forms. In the two older child groups, as well as in the adult group, over-regularized plural forms elicited brain responses that are characteristic of combinatorial (grammatical) violations. We also found that ERP components associated with language processing change from child to adult with respect to their onsets and their topography. The ERP violation effects obtained for over-regularizations suggest that children (aged eight years and above) and adults employ morphological computation for processing purposes, consistent with dual-mechanism models of inflection. The observed differences between children's and adults' ERP responses are argued to result from children's smaller lexicons and from slower and less efficient processing.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Generalization, Psychological , Recognition, Psychology/physiology , Adult , Child , Female , Humans , Male
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