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Which is more costly in Chinese to English simultaneous interpreting, "pairing" or "transphrasing"? Evidence from an fNIRS neuroimaging study
Lin, Xiaohong1,2; Lei, Victoria Lai Cheng3; Li, Defeng3; Yuan, Zhen1
2018-04
Source PublicationNEUROPHOTONICS
ISSN2329-423X
Volume5Issue:2
Abstract

This study examined the neural mechanism underlying two translation strategies associated with Chinese to English simultaneous interpreting (SI) targeting the left prefrontal cortex (PFC), which is generally involved in the control of interference and conflict resolution and has been identified as the brain area that plays a pivotal role in SI. Brain activation associated with the two strategies including "pairing" and "transphrasing" were compared with that from "nontranslation," which keeps the source language item unchanged in the target language production and is considered as a tactic that does not require complex cognitive operation associated with bilingual processing effort. Our findings revealed that "pairing" elicited the strongest and almost immediate brain activation in the Broca's area, and "transphrasing" resulted in the most extensive and strongest activation overall in the left PFC. By contrast, "nontranslation" induced very little brain activation in these regions. This work, which represents one of the first efforts in investigating brain activation related to translation strategies involving different levels of cognitive control, will not only pave a new avenue for better understanding of the cognitive mechanism underlying SI but also provide further insight into the role that the Broca's region plays in domaingeneral cognitive control. 

KeywordFunctional Near-infrared Spectroscopy Simultaneous Interpreting Translation Strategies
DOI10.1117/1.NPh.5.2.025010
URLView the original
Indexed BySCIE ; SSCI
Language英語English
WOS Research AreaNeurosciences & Neurology ; Optics
WOS SubjectNeurosciences ; Optics
WOS IDWOS:000438894900010
PublisherSPIE-SOC PHOTO-OPTICAL INSTRUMENTATION ENGINEERS
The Source to ArticleWOS
Scopus ID2-s2.0-85048375754
Fulltext Access
Citation statistics
Document TypeJournal article
CollectionFaculty of Arts and Humanities
Faculty of Health Sciences
DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH AND MEDICINAL ADMINISTRATION
Corresponding AuthorLi, Defeng; Yuan, Zhen
Affiliation1.University of Macau, Bioimaging Core, Faculty of Health Sciences, Macao
2.Hangzhou Normal University, Institutes of Psychological Sciences, Hangzhou, China
3.University of Macau, Centre for Studies of Translation, Interpreting and Cognition, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Macao
First Author AffilicationFaculty of Health Sciences
Corresponding Author AffilicationFaculty of Arts and Humanities;  Faculty of Health Sciences
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Lin, Xiaohong,Lei, Victoria Lai Cheng,Li, Defeng,et al. Which is more costly in Chinese to English simultaneous interpreting, "pairing" or "transphrasing"? Evidence from an fNIRS neuroimaging study[J]. NEUROPHOTONICS, 2018, 5(2).
APA Lin, Xiaohong., Lei, Victoria Lai Cheng., Li, Defeng., & Yuan, Zhen (2018). Which is more costly in Chinese to English simultaneous interpreting, "pairing" or "transphrasing"? Evidence from an fNIRS neuroimaging study. NEUROPHOTONICS, 5(2).
MLA Lin, Xiaohong,et al."Which is more costly in Chinese to English simultaneous interpreting, "pairing" or "transphrasing"? Evidence from an fNIRS neuroimaging study".NEUROPHOTONICS 5.2(2018).
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