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5 - Varying degrees of plasticity in different subsystems within language
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- By Lisa D. Sanders, Department of Psychology University of Massachusetts at Amherst Tobin Hall, 135 Hicks Way Amherst, MA 01003, Christine M. Weber-Fox, Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences Purdue University West Lafayette, IN 47907, Helen J. Neville, Director Brain Development Lab; Professor Psychology and Neuroscience University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon 97403-1227
- Edited by James R. Pomerantz, Rice University, Houston
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- Book:
- Topics in Integrative Neuroscience
- Published online:
- 08 August 2009
- Print publication:
- 21 February 2008, pp 125-153
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- Chapter
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Summary
There are periods in development during which experience plays its largest role in shaping the eventual structure and function of mature language-processing systems. These spans of peak cortical plasticity have been called “sensitive periods.” Here, we describe a series of studies investigating the effects of delays in second language (L2) acquisition on different subsystems within language. First, we review the effects of the altered language experience of congenitally deaf subjects on cerebral systems important for processing written English and American Sign Language (ASL). Second, we present behavioral and electrophysiological studies of L2 semantic and syntactic processing in Chinese-English bilinguals who acquired their second language over a wide range of ages. Third, we review semantic, syntactic, and prosodic processing in native Spanish and native Japanese late-learners of English. These approaches have provided converging evidence, indicating that delays in language acquisition have minimal effects on some aspects of semantic processing. In contrast, delays of even a few years result in deficits in some types of syntactic processing and differences in the organization of cortical systems used to process syntactic information. The different subsystems of language which rely on different cortical areas, including semantic, syntactic, phonological, and prosodic processing, may have different developmental time courses that in part determine the different sensitive period effects observed.
Humans, in comparison to other animals, go through a protracted period of post-natal development that lasts at least 15 years (Chugani & Phelps, 1986; Huttenlocher, 1990).