The Neural Substrates Underlying the Implementation of Phonological Rule in Lexical Tone Production: An fMRI Study of the Tone 3 Sandhi Phenomenon in Mandarin Chinese.

This study examined the neural substrates underlying the implementation of phonological rule in lexical tone by the Tone 3 sandhi phenomenon in Mandarin Chinese. Tone 3 sandhi is traditionally described as the substitution of Tone 3 with Tone 2 when followed by another Tone 3 (33 →23) during speech...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Claire H C Chang, Wen-Jui Kuo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4959711?pdf=render
id doaj-eb783a1b7c6243309992bb77c232a5ce
record_format Article
spelling doaj-eb783a1b7c6243309992bb77c232a5ce2020-11-25T02:47:04ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01117e015983510.1371/journal.pone.0159835The Neural Substrates Underlying the Implementation of Phonological Rule in Lexical Tone Production: An fMRI Study of the Tone 3 Sandhi Phenomenon in Mandarin Chinese.Claire H C ChangWen-Jui KuoThis study examined the neural substrates underlying the implementation of phonological rule in lexical tone by the Tone 3 sandhi phenomenon in Mandarin Chinese. Tone 3 sandhi is traditionally described as the substitution of Tone 3 with Tone 2 when followed by another Tone 3 (33 →23) during speech production. Tone 3 sandhi enables the examination of tone processing in the phonological level with the least involvement of segments. Using the fMRI technique, we measured brain activations corresponding to the monosyllable and disyllable sequences of the four Chinese lexical tones, while manipulating the requirement on overt oral response. The application of Tone 3 sandhi to disyllable sequence of Tone 3 was confirmed by our behavioral results. Larger brain responses to overtly produced disyllable Tone 3 (33 > 11, 22, and 44) were found in right posterior IFG by both whole-brain and ROI analyses. We suggest that the right IFG was responsible for the processing of Tone 3 sandhi. Intense temporo-frontal interaction is needed in speech production for self-monitoring. The involvement of the right IFG in tone production might result from its interaction with the right auditory cortex, which is known to specialize in pitch. Future studies using tools with better temporal resolutions are needed to illuminate the dynamic interaction between the right inferior frontal regions and the left-lateralized language network in tone languages.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4959711?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Claire H C Chang
Wen-Jui Kuo
spellingShingle Claire H C Chang
Wen-Jui Kuo
The Neural Substrates Underlying the Implementation of Phonological Rule in Lexical Tone Production: An fMRI Study of the Tone 3 Sandhi Phenomenon in Mandarin Chinese.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Claire H C Chang
Wen-Jui Kuo
author_sort Claire H C Chang
title The Neural Substrates Underlying the Implementation of Phonological Rule in Lexical Tone Production: An fMRI Study of the Tone 3 Sandhi Phenomenon in Mandarin Chinese.
title_short The Neural Substrates Underlying the Implementation of Phonological Rule in Lexical Tone Production: An fMRI Study of the Tone 3 Sandhi Phenomenon in Mandarin Chinese.
title_full The Neural Substrates Underlying the Implementation of Phonological Rule in Lexical Tone Production: An fMRI Study of the Tone 3 Sandhi Phenomenon in Mandarin Chinese.
title_fullStr The Neural Substrates Underlying the Implementation of Phonological Rule in Lexical Tone Production: An fMRI Study of the Tone 3 Sandhi Phenomenon in Mandarin Chinese.
title_full_unstemmed The Neural Substrates Underlying the Implementation of Phonological Rule in Lexical Tone Production: An fMRI Study of the Tone 3 Sandhi Phenomenon in Mandarin Chinese.
title_sort neural substrates underlying the implementation of phonological rule in lexical tone production: an fmri study of the tone 3 sandhi phenomenon in mandarin chinese.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description This study examined the neural substrates underlying the implementation of phonological rule in lexical tone by the Tone 3 sandhi phenomenon in Mandarin Chinese. Tone 3 sandhi is traditionally described as the substitution of Tone 3 with Tone 2 when followed by another Tone 3 (33 →23) during speech production. Tone 3 sandhi enables the examination of tone processing in the phonological level with the least involvement of segments. Using the fMRI technique, we measured brain activations corresponding to the monosyllable and disyllable sequences of the four Chinese lexical tones, while manipulating the requirement on overt oral response. The application of Tone 3 sandhi to disyllable sequence of Tone 3 was confirmed by our behavioral results. Larger brain responses to overtly produced disyllable Tone 3 (33 > 11, 22, and 44) were found in right posterior IFG by both whole-brain and ROI analyses. We suggest that the right IFG was responsible for the processing of Tone 3 sandhi. Intense temporo-frontal interaction is needed in speech production for self-monitoring. The involvement of the right IFG in tone production might result from its interaction with the right auditory cortex, which is known to specialize in pitch. Future studies using tools with better temporal resolutions are needed to illuminate the dynamic interaction between the right inferior frontal regions and the left-lateralized language network in tone languages.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4959711?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT clairehcchang theneuralsubstratesunderlyingtheimplementationofphonologicalruleinlexicaltoneproductionanfmristudyofthetone3sandhiphenomenoninmandarinchinese
AT wenjuikuo theneuralsubstratesunderlyingtheimplementationofphonologicalruleinlexicaltoneproductionanfmristudyofthetone3sandhiphenomenoninmandarinchinese
AT clairehcchang neuralsubstratesunderlyingtheimplementationofphonologicalruleinlexicaltoneproductionanfmristudyofthetone3sandhiphenomenoninmandarinchinese
AT wenjuikuo neuralsubstratesunderlyingtheimplementationofphonologicalruleinlexicaltoneproductionanfmristudyofthetone3sandhiphenomenoninmandarinchinese
_version_ 1724754797810155520