4.6 Article

Visual Sensory Cortices Causally Contribute to Auditory Word Recognition Following Sensorimotor-Enriched Vocabulary Training

Journal

CEREBRAL CORTEX
Volume 31, Issue 1, Pages 513-528

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhaa240

Keywords

biological motion; foreign language learning; gesture; sensorimotor learning; TMS

Categories

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation [KR 3735/3-1]
  2. Max Planck Research Group
  3. Erasmus Mundus Postdoctoral Fellowship
  4. European Research Council [SENSOCOM 647051]

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This study examined the importance of the biological motion visual cortices in gesture-enriched language learning. The results demonstrated the critical contribution of the visual motion cortex integrity to learning outcomes, both in short-term and long-term, and for concrete and abstract words. This supports the predictive coding theory view that these cortices play a role in sensorimotor-based learning benefits.
Despite a rise in the use of learning by doing pedagogical methods in praxis, little is known as to how the brain benefits from these methods. Learning by doing strategies that utilize complementary information (enrichment) such as gestures have been shown to optimize learning outcomes in several domains including foreign language (L2) training. Here we tested the hypothesis that behavioral benefits of gesture-based enrichment are critically supported by integrity of the biological motion visual cortices (bmSTS). Prior functional neuroimaging work has implicated the visual motion cortices in L2 translation following sensorimotor-enriched training; the current study is the first to investigate the causal relevance of these structures in learning by doing contexts. Using neuronavigated transcranial magnetic stimulation and a gesture-enriched L2 vocabulary learning paradigm, we found that the bmSTS causally contributed to behavioral benefits of gesture-enriched learning. Visual motion cortex integrity benefitted both short- and long-term learning outcomes, as well as the learning of concrete and abstract words. These results adjudicate between opposing predictions of two neuroscientific learning theories: While reactivation-based theories predict no functional role of specialized sensory cortices in vocabulary learning outcomes, the current study supports the predictive coding theory view that these cortices precipitate sensorimotor-based learning benefits.

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