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Brain responses reveal the learning of foreign language phonemes

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Learning to speak a new language requires the formation of recognition patterns for the speech sounds specific to the newly acquired language. The present study demonstrates the dynamic nature of cortical memory representations for phonemes in adults by using the mismatch negativity (MMN) event-related potential. We studied Hungarian and Finnish subjects, dividing the Hungarians into a naive (no knowledge of Finnish) and a fluent (in Finnish) group. We found that the MMN for a contrast between two Finnish phonemes was elicited in the fluent Hungarians but not in the naive Hungarians. This result indicates that the fluent Hungarians developed cortical memory representations for the Finnish phoneme system that enabled them to preattentively categorize phonemes specific to this language.
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Keywords: Brain plasticity; Event-related brain potentials; Language learning; Mismatch negativity; Phoneme system; Vowel contrast

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: 1: Institute for Psychology, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary 2: Cognitive Brain Research Unit, Department of Psychology, University of Helsinki, Finland 3: Department of Applied Physics, Electronics and Information Technology, University of Turku, Finland 4: BioMag Laboratory, Medical Engineering Centre, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Finland

Publication date: September 1, 1999

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