Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
925518 Brain and Language 2011 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we neuroimaged deaf adults as they performed two linguistic tasks with sentences in American Sign Language, grammatical judgment and phonemic-hand judgment. Participants’ age-onset of sign language acquisition ranged from birth to 14 years; length of sign language experience was substantial and did not vary in relation to age of acquisition. For both tasks, a more left lateralized pattern of activation was observed, with activity for grammatical judgment being more anterior than that observed for phonemic-hand judgment, which was more posterior by comparison. Age of acquisition was linearly and negatively related to activation levels in anterior language regions and positively related to activation levels in posterior visual regions for both tasks.

► We investigated age of acquisition effects on the neural processing of sign language. ► One task was grammatical judgment and another was a lower level phonemic task. ► Age of acquisition affected the anterior–posterior dimension of neural processing. ► Effects were similar for both tasks and unrelated to performance or experience.

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