A γ operational workspace for syntax in L1 and L2 processing: evidence from recursive re-representations of wh-fillers in French

Recent theoretical proposals identify cortical gamma (γ) oscillations as signaling a mechanistic γ operational workspace (e.g., Murphy, 2024). Following the hypothesis that first (L1) and second (L2) languages involve shared neurofunctional mechanisms (Green & Abutalebi, 2008), we document corti...

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Vydané v:Journal of neurolinguistics Ročník 76; s. 101281
Hlavní autori: Dekydtspotter, Laurent, Miller, A. Kate, Iverson, Mike, Cha, Jih-ho, Gilbert, Jane A., Ahn, Jae Hyun, Meinert, Kent, Yang, Ludan, Zhang, Hongyu
Médium: Journal Article
Jazyk:English
Vydavateľské údaje: Elsevier Ltd 01.11.2025
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ISSN:0911-6044
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Shrnutí:Recent theoretical proposals identify cortical gamma (γ) oscillations as signaling a mechanistic γ operational workspace (e.g., Murphy, 2024). Following the hypothesis that first (L1) and second (L2) languages involve shared neurofunctional mechanisms (Green & Abutalebi, 2008), we document cortical γ oscillatory dynamics in processing wh-filler-gap dependencies across a clause edge such as ‘Which decision regarding/about him did Paul say that Lydie had rejected without hesitation?’ in L1 and L2 French using electroencephalography. We manipulated wh-filler grammatical specifications with modifiers (Mods) vs. lexically specified complements (Comps) and with pronouns marked for antecedent gender or not. We used cluster-based non-parametric permutation tests (Oostenveld et al., 2011) in an analysis window covering ‘said that’ in two bins: 30–100Hz (broadband γ) and 30–50Hz (low γ). Event-related power differences (ERPDs) showed greater power for Comps than Mods and for antecedent-gender-specified than gender-unspecified Comps across L1 and L2. Narrowband/low-γ effects started in advance of bridge verb access and were maintained after verb access into the subordinator. These significant effects were echoed by broadband-γ ERPDs timed with the verb and subordinator, suggesting output activity in object creation. Two bursts of between-group ERPDs in low and broadband γ, respectively, reflected the (lack of) antecedent-gender specification of pronouns in anaphora relations. Hence, these patterns of oscillatory dynamics suggest that similarities and differences between L1 and L2 are accounted for by a γ-implemented operational workspace (Murphy, 2024) that enables the creation of structural and referential chain objects (Dekydtspotter et al., 2024). •A γ operational workspace enables basic syntactic and referential object creation.•γ-range oscillatory dynamics provide new insights into nature of L1 & L2 processing.•Neurofunctional bases of L1 & L2 processing reside in adaptive network dynamics.
ISSN:0911-6044
DOI:10.1016/j.jneuroling.2025.101281