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Research Articles, Behavioral/Cognitive

How Grammar Conveys Meaning: Language-specific spatial encoding patterns and cross-language commonality in higher-order neural space

Jing Wang, Hui Lin and Qing Cai
Journal of Neuroscience 15 September 2023, JN-RM-0599-23; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0599-23.2023
Jing Wang
1Key Laboratory of Brain Functional Genomics (MOE & STCSM), Affiliated Mental Health Center (ECNU), Institute of Brain and Education Innovation, School of Psychology and Cognitive Science, East China Normal University, Shanghai 20062, China
2Shanghai Changning Mental Health Center, Shanghai 200335, China
4Shanghai Center for Brain Science and Brain-Inspired Technology, East China Normal University, China
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Hui Lin
3Shanghai Key Laboratory of Artificial Intelligence in Learning and Cognitive Science, LAIX Inc., China
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Qing Cai
1Key Laboratory of Brain Functional Genomics (MOE & STCSM), Affiliated Mental Health Center (ECNU), Institute of Brain and Education Innovation, School of Psychology and Cognitive Science, East China Normal University, Shanghai 20062, China
2Shanghai Changning Mental Health Center, Shanghai 200335, China
4Shanghai Center for Brain Science and Brain-Inspired Technology, East China Normal University, China
5NYU-ECNU Institute of Brain and Cognitive Science, New York University, Shanghai, China
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Abstract

Languages come in different forms but have shared meanings to convey. Some meanings are expressed by sentence structure and morphological inflections rather than content words, such as indicating time frame using tense. This fMRI study investigates whether there is cross-language common representation of grammatical meanings that can be identified from neural signatures in the bilingual human brain. Based on the representations in inter-sentence neural similarity space, identifying grammatical construction of a sentence in one language by models trained on the other language resulted in reliable accuracy. By contrast, cross-language identification of grammatical construction by spatially matched activation patterns was only marginally accurate. Brain locations representing grammatical meaning in the two languages were interleaved in common regions bilaterally. The locations of voxels representing grammatical features in the second language were more varied across individuals than voxels representing the first language. These findings suggest grammatical meaning is represented by language-specific activation patterns, which is different from lexical semantics. Commonality of grammatical meaning is neurally reflected only in the inter-stimulus similarity space.

Significance Statement

Whether human brain encodes sentence-level meanings beyond content words in different languages similarly has been a long-standing question. We characterize the neural representations of similar grammatical meanings in different languages. Using complementary analytic approaches on fMRI data, we show that the same grammatical meaning is neurally represented as the common pattern of neural distances between sentences. The results suggest the possibility of identifying specific grammatical meaning expressed by different morphological and syntactic implementations of different languages. The neural realization of grammatical meanings is constrained by the specific language being used, but the relationships between the neural representations of sentences are preserved across languages. These findings have some theoretical implications on a distinction between grammar and lexical meanings.

Footnotes

  • Authors declare that they have no competing interests.

  • This work was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (31970987 to QC; 32100857 to JW), and LAIX Inc. (to QC). We thank Dr. Samuel A. Nastase and two anonymous reviewers for their insightful comments and discussions that helped use improve the quality of this work. We are grateful to Miaomiao Zhu, Lechuan Wang, and Zhichao Wang for the assistance in data collection, to Fan Yang and Guannan Zhao for recruiting participants and technical support, and to Ruiqing Zhang for helpful discussion.

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How Grammar Conveys Meaning: Language-specific spatial encoding patterns and cross-language commonality in higher-order neural space
Jing Wang, Hui Lin, Qing Cai
Journal of Neuroscience 15 September 2023, JN-RM-0599-23; DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0599-23.2023

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How Grammar Conveys Meaning: Language-specific spatial encoding patterns and cross-language commonality in higher-order neural space
Jing Wang, Hui Lin, Qing Cai
Journal of Neuroscience 15 September 2023, JN-RM-0599-23; DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0599-23.2023
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