“…By comparing neural activity elicited by different languages in bilinguals or multilinguals, existing research has revealed that native and second languages have common activations in a wide neural network, including the prefrontal cortex, temporoparietal regions, and occipitotemporal regions (Cao et al, 2013 ; Chee et al, 1999 ; Dong et al, 2020 ; Feng et al, 2020 ; Klein et al, 1995 ; Li et al, 2019 ; Nichols et al, 2021 ; Ou et al, 2020 ; Wang et al, 2011 ; Wong et al, 2016 ; Xue et al, 2004 ; Yokoyama et al, 2006 ). Subsequent studies further revealed that linguistic factors (e.g., language distance between native and second languages) and learner‐related factors (e.g., proficiency and age of acquisition in the second language) modulated the degree of similarity in activation patterns between native and second languages (Berken et al, 2015 ; Bloch et al, 2009 ; Cargnelutti et al, 2019 ; Li et al, 2021 ; Liu & Cao, 2016 ; Nichols et al, 2021 ; Xu et al, 2021 ). For example, compared to late bilinguals or bilinguals with lower second language proficiency, early bilinguals or bilinguals with higher proficiency in the second language showed less activation differences between the two languages (Chee et al, 2001 ; Gao et al, 2017 ; Lee et al, 2003 ; Sebastian et al, 2011 ; Wartenburger et al, 2003 ; Xu et al, 2021 ).…”