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Language and lateralization Lecture 5 (Chapters 8 and 9)

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2 Language and lateralization Lecture 5 (Chapters 8 and 9)

3 Last week We did some basic memory experiments We tried to locate memory in the brain and to relate brain lesions to amnesia We also explored executive functions in the frontal lobes

4 This week We will look at: –Aphasia –Speech production and perception –Language, its origins –… and the brain –Lateralization This covers chapters 8 and 9 (ends at page 369)

5 Examples of exam questions What is the role of the hippocampus in memory? Describe what to expect with patients who have bilateral lesions of the hippocampus. Describe three different ways in which brain lateralization has been studied Mention some reasons why speech perception is difficult

6 Neuroanatomical questions Draw as accurately as possible where Broca’s and Wernicke’s areas are located? Which part of the brain is anterior?

7 Broca’s aphasia

8 Wernicke’s aphasia

9 Relative location of language areas

10 Early model of language in the brain

11 Schematic model (oversimplified) BrocaWernicke Concepts

12 What is speech? Speech are modulated wave forms that are produced by a source (lungs and glottis) and filtered by the vocal tract and lips and cheeks

13 Source-filter model of speech

14 Speech production

15 English vowels: formants

16 o a The position of the articulatory organs during production of the vowels ah and oh

17 Speech perception is very difficult

18 Understanding language is even more difficult

19 Language is hierarchical and can be extremely ambiguous

20 Willem Levelt’s model of speech production and perception

21 From concept to speech signal

22 Very complicated transformation take place during speaking A conceptual representation is a network of neurons that fire with a complex associative correlational pattern This conceptual-semantic pattern is transformed into a hierarchical syntactic pattern This pattern is transformed into a serial speech pattern

23 Semantic networks may be used to help think about the associative networks in the brain

24 Better is it to view concepts as vectors of abstract ‘features’

25 Where does language come from? Certain aspects of the development of language and thought appear to be universal in that they –(i) preceed any learning by the individual –(ii) are found in all individuals in the same way These universalia are often of a deep and abstract nature It is not known at present how they are respresented in the brain, or how they emerge from brain organization

26 Universal constraints in thought development Spelke shows that from a very early age, infants know about the continuity and solidity of objects These constraints lie at the core of the developmental learning system It is not clear how these are represented in the brain or how they emerge

27 Biological origins of language Why do we have language? Co-evolution of ‘memes’ or cultural products, which uses language as a carrier? What is language?

28 De Saussure distinguished ‘langue’ from ‘parole’ Chomsky distinguished ‘competence’ from ‘performance’ Chomsky strongly defended the idea of the innateness of language

29 Grammar may be innate

30 The essence of grammar is recursion Simple grammar G = {N,V,S,P} S  aSa S  bSb S  c E.g., c, aca, bcb, aacaa, aabacabaa S  aSa  aaSaa  aabSbaa  aabaSabaa  aabacabaa The man lit his awful sigar The man that you thought was old lit his awful sigar The man that you thought that your mother had seen lit his awful sigar et cetera It allows an infinite number of sentences to be generated by just a few rules

31 Creoles and the origins of language Creoles are based on pidgins A pidgin is not a uniform language A pidgin is not a complete language Creoles are strikingly similar all over the world Creoles probably emerge in a single generation Creoles emerge spontaneously

32 Hatian creole

33 Selection versus instruction Chomsky/Pinker: The child must select a grammar Bickerton: The child is provided with a specific grammar, which it than modifies in the direction of the caretaker’s language

34 Conclusion: Not all languages may be equally hard to learn Children’s errors when learning English often resemble creole, for example, the so called double negative Perhaps, creole is the ‘original mother language’

35 Where is language located in the brain?

36 PET data corroborate the lesion data

37 How can semantic organization be organized according to category? Self-organizing maps in the brain can explain the emergence of topological mappings Examples are: –the somatosensory homunculus (discussed in lecture 7) –retinotopic maps in V1 (area 17, discussed in lecture 3)

38 Semantic organization can emerge on the basis of word context (Ritter and Kohonen, 1990)

39 Interesting is that words organize into both semantic and grammatical categories Example of a semantotopic map

40 Lateralization of brain function

41 There are several ways to investigate brain lateralization Split-brain patients Amytal testing Dichotic listening and other lateralized experimental procedures

42 Split brain patients offer important insights into lateralization

43 Communication between the hemispheres can be investigated

44 With amytal testing one hemisphere is anesthetized

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47 Dichotic listening is a ‘normal’ experimental procedure

48 Left-brain may attend more to detail, righ-brain more to contour

49 Right brain is faster for global stimuli Left brain is faster for local stimuli

50 ‘Level of detail’ may be defined through spatial frequency

51 Next week... Motor control Population coding Chapter 10


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