Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
925375 Brain and Language 2013 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

This study explores oscillatory brain activity by means of event-related synchronization and desynchronization (%ERS/ERD) of EEG activity during the use of phonological and orthographic-morphological spelling strategies in L2 (English) and L1 (German) in native German speaking children. EEG was recorded while 33 children worked on a task requiring either phonological or orthographic-morphological spelling strategies. L2 processing elicited more theta %ERS than L1 processing (particularly at bilateral frontal and right posterior parietal sites) which might suggest a stronger involvement of semantic encoding and retrieval of the less familiar L2. The highest level of theta %ERS was revealed for the orthographic-morphological strategy in L2 which might indicate a more intense way of lexical retrieval compared to the phonological strategy in L2 and the orthographic-morphological strategy in L1. Analyses moreover revealed that phonological processing (both in L1 and L2) was associated with comparatively strong left-hemispheric %ERD in the upper alpha frequency band.

► We examined potential differences in oscillatory EEG dynamics between L1 and L2. ► Phonological and orthographic-morphological spelling strategies were compared. ► More theta %ERS was found in L2 than in L1. ► L2 seems to involve semantic encoding and retrieval more strongly than L1. ► Strongest theta %ERS was revealed for the L2 orthographic-morphological strategy.

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