4.5 Article

The Differences in the Whole-Brain Functional Network between Cantonese-Mandarin Bilinguals and Mandarin Monolinguals

Journal

BRAIN SCIENCES
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci11030310

Keywords

Cantonese-Mandarin bilinguals; Mandarin monolinguals; resting state fMRI; network-based statistics (NBS); graph theory; functional network connectivity

Categories

Funding

  1. Key Realm R&D Program of Guangdong Province [2019B030335001]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81673197]

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This study aimed to investigate the effect of long-term logographic-logographic bilingual experience on whole-brain network functional connectivity. The results showed that Cantonese-Mandarin bilinguals exhibited enhanced and decreased functional connectivity in specific brain regions compared to Mandarin monolinguals, but there were no significant differences in overall network efficiency between the two groups.
Cantonese-Mandarin bilinguals are logographic-logographic bilinguals that provide a unique population for bilingual studies. Whole brain functional connectivity analysis makes up for the deficiencies of previous bilingual studies on the seed-based approach and helps give a complete picture of the brain connectivity profiles of logographic-logographic bilinguals. The current study is to explore the effect of the long-term logographic-logographic bilingual experience on the functional connectivity of the whole-brain network. Thirty Cantonese-Mandarin bilingual and 30 Mandarin monolingual college students were recruited in the study. Resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) was performed to investigate the whole-brain functional connectivity differences by network-based statistics (NBS), and the differences in network efficiency were investigated by graph theory between the two groups (false discovery rate corrected for multiple comparisons, q = 0.05). Compared with the Mandarin monolingual group, Cantonese-Mandarin bilinguals increased functional connectivity between the bilateral frontoparietal and temporal regions and decreased functional connectivity in the bilateral occipital cortex and between the right sensorimotor region and bilateral prefrontal cortex. No significant differences in network efficiency were found between the two groups. Compared with the Mandarin monolinguals, Cantonese-Mandarin bilinguals had no significant discrepancies in network efficiency. However, the Cantonese-Mandarin bilinguals developed a more strongly connected subnetwork related to language control, inhibition, phonological and semantic processing, and memory retrieval, whereas a weaker connected subnetwork related to visual and phonology processing, and speech production also developed.

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