[WTI-trainee] [ICN] Talk reminder: Dr. Brendan Costello, 4/17 at 10:30AM
Da Silva, Nancy
nancy.dasilva at yale.edu
Tue Apr 16 11:11:11 EDT 2024
Yes, of course- all set! 😊
Nancy daSilva
Neuroscience Program Coordinator
Yale College
neuroscience.yale.edu<https://neuroscience.yale.edu/>
From: Erica Busch <erica.busch at yale.edu>
Sent: Tuesday, April 16, 2024 9:29 AM
To: Da Silva, Nancy <nancy.dasilva at yale.edu>; WTI-Trainee at mailman.yale.edu
Subject: Fwd: [ICN] Talk reminder: Dr. Brendan Costello, 4/17 at 10:30AM
Could you forward this to your list serv please?
Thanks,
Erica
Begin forwarded message:
From: Erica Busch <erica.busch at yale.edu<mailto:erica.busch at yale.edu>>
Subject: [ICN] Talk reminder: Dr. Brendan Costello, 4/17 at 10:30AM
Date: April 16, 2024 at 9:20:03 AM EDT
To: Psych.all at mailman.yale.edu<mailto:Psych.all at mailman.yale.edu>
Dear Colleagues,
We hope you'll join us tomorrow (Wed, 4/17) at 10:30am for an Innovators in Cognitive Neuroscience <https://innovatorsincogneuro.github.io/> seminar given by Dr. Brendan Costello<https://www.bcbl.eu/en/conocenos/equipo/brendan-costello>, Staff Scientist-Juan de la Cierva (Incorporación) Fellow 2022-2024, Basque Center on Cognition, Brain, and Language (BCBL).
Languages across modalities: bimodal bilinguals reveal how modality impacts language structure and processing
Speaking a language is remarkable, but commonplace, feat. Almost as commonplace, but even more remarkable is speaking more than one language: bilinguals need to deal with two different sets of words and grammars, and a large body of research has investigated how the brain represents two languages and how separate or intertwined these representations are. What happens when a person knows two languages that operate in different modalities: a spoken language, like English or Spanish, and a signed language, like American Sign Language or Spanish Sign Language? This is a rare form of bilingualism – relatively few people get the opportunity to learn a sign language – but one that raises all sorts of questions about how language is shaped by its modality, and how this impacts the way that language is represented in the brain. In this talk, I will review a series of studies that we have carried out with bimodal bilinguals of Spanish and Spanish Sign Language, using a variety of techniques (behavioural, eye-tracking and magnetoencephaolography-MEG). The results demonstrate that, on the one hand, bimodal bilinguals show the same underlying mechanisms of language representation and control as common-or-garden spoken language bilinguals, while, on the other hand, differences between speech and sign translate into differences in how each language is processed by the brain, highlighting that modality does indeed shape language structure and representation.
Zoom link: https://dartmouth.zoom.us/j/92366533850?pwd=T3NNOHJLcDhBekREaFNQV2VkeGpTQT09
Please follow ICN on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter<https://twitter.com/InnovatorsTalk> and subscribe<https://dartmouth.us2.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=436ce3daea4b50b18050bd550&id=978a43b81d> to receive announcements.
Best regards,
Erica Busch, Omri Raccah, and Sam McDougle
On behalf of the Innovators in Cognitive Neuroscience Organizing Committee<https://innovatorsincogneuro.github.io/about-us.html>
----
Erica L. Busch
PhD Candidate, Neuroscience
Turk-Browne Lab
Yale University Department of Psychology
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