Neurocognitive mechanisms of emotional interference in native and foreign languages: evidence from proficient bilinguals
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35612Date
2024-08-07Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Del Maschio, Nicola; Sulpizio, Simone; Bellini, Camilla; Del Mauro, Gianpaolo; Giannachi, Matteo; Buga, Duygu; Fedeli, Davide; Perani, Daniela; Aboutalebi, JubinAbstract
Currently available data show mixed results as to whether the processing of
emotional information has the same characteristics in the native (L1) as in
the second language (L2) of bilinguals. We conducted a functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI) experiment to shed light on the neurocognitive
mechanisms underlying bilinguals’ emotional processing in L1 and L2 during
an emotional interference task (i.e., the Emotional Stroop Task – EST). Our
sample comprised proficient Italian-English bilinguals who learned their L2
during childhood mainly in instructional rather than immersive contexts. In spite
of no detectable behavioural effects, we found stronger brain activations for L1
versus L2 emotional words in sectors of the posteromedial cortex involved in
attention modulation, episodic memory, and affective processing. While fMRI
findings are consistent with the hypothesis of a stronger emotional resonance
when processing words in a native language, our overall pattern of results
points to the different sensitivity of behavioural and hemodynamic responses
to emotional information in the two languages of bilingual speakers.
Publisher
Frontiers MediaCitation
Del Maschio, Sulpizio, Bellini, Del Mauro, Giannachi, Buga, Fedeli, Perani, Aboutalebi. Neurocognitive mechanisms of emotional interference in native and foreign languages: evidence from proficient bilinguals. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience. 2024;18Metadata
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