Capturing underlying differentiation in the human language system

2003 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 62-63 ◽  
Author(s):  
William D. Marslen-Wilson ◽  
Lorraine K. Tyler
2005 ◽  
Vol 1278 ◽  
pp. 397-400 ◽  
Author(s):  
Riki Matsumoto ◽  
Dileep R. Nair ◽  
William Bingaman ◽  
Akio Ikeda ◽  
Hiroshi Shibasaki ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuanyi Chen ◽  
Josef Affourtit ◽  
Rachel Ryskin ◽  
Tamar I. Regev ◽  
Samuel Norman-Haignere ◽  
...  

Language and music are two human-unique capacities whose relationship remains debated. Some argue for overlap in processing mechanisms, especially for structure processing, but others fail to find overlap. Using fMRI, we examined the responses of language brain regions to diverse music stimuli, and also probed the musical abilities of individuals with severe aphasia. Across four experiments, we obtained a clear answer: music does not recruit nor requires the language system. The language regions′ responses to music are generally low and never exceed responses elicited by non-music auditory conditions, like animal sounds. Further, the language regions are not sensitive to music structure: they show low responses to both intact and scrambled music, and to melodies with vs. without structural violations. Finally, individuals with aphasia who cannot judge sentence grammaticality perform well on melody well-formedness judgments. Thus the mechanisms that process structure in language do not appear to support music processing.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cory Shain ◽  
Hope Kean ◽  
Benjamin Lipkin ◽  
Josef Affourtit ◽  
Matthew Siegelman ◽  
...  

How are syntactically and semantically connected word sequences, or constituents, represented in the human language system? An influential fMRI study, Pallier et al. (2011, PNAS), manipulated the length of constituents in sequences of words or pseudowords. They reported that some language regions (in the anterior temporal cortex and near the temporo-parietal junction) were sensitive to constituent length only for sequences of real words but not pseudowords. In contrast, language regions in the inferior frontal and posterior temporal cortex showed the same pattern of increased response to longer constituents - and similar overall response magnitudes - for word and pseudoword sequences. Based on these results, Pallier et al. argued that the latter regions represent abstract sentence structure. Here we identify methodological and theoretical concerns with the Pallier et al. study and conduct a replication across two fMRI experiments. Our results do not support Pallier et al.'s critical claim of distinct neural specialization for abstract syntactic representations. Instead, we find that all language regions show a similar profile of sensitivity to both constituent length and lexicality (stronger responses to real-word than pseudoword stimuli). In addition, we argue that the constituent length effect in these experiments i) is not readily grounded in established theories of sentence processing, and ii) may not actually derive from syntactic structure building, but may instead reflect the temporal receptive window of the human language system.


Brain ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 127 (10) ◽  
pp. 2316-2330 ◽  
Author(s):  
Riki Matsumoto ◽  
Dileep R. Nair ◽  
Eric LaPresto ◽  
Imad Najm ◽  
William Bingaman ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 367-384
Author(s):  
Tauhedi As'ad ◽  
Munif Shaleh

God's language is not reached by human nature because God's language enters the parole area which cannot be verified, because parole language is God's revelation that cannot be intervened by the human language system. This model, is very new to be continued in the approach of Islamic studies, especially modern linguistic studies developed by Ferinand De Sausure, then by Paul Ricouer as the post structuralist father. However, if you re-understand the language of God in the perspective of modern linguistics as an approach in Islamic thought, then there is a problem that is addressed, namely the existence of God's Revelation which wraps into Arabic, then the corpus is formalized as a manuscript written by humans. Then God's revelation will lose the existence of authority as the owner of the message of revelation so that the Koran that is read now by all Muslims is no longer sacred and authentic. This is the revelation imprisoned by Arabic as the Ottoman Manuscripts.


2004 ◽  
Vol 14 (02) ◽  
pp. 383-404 ◽  
Author(s):  
DOUGLAS SADDY ◽  
JUAN URIAGEREKA

The study of language, its processing and its bearing on human cortical processes are all extensive domains of investigation in their own right. In this overview tutorial we limit ourselves to a sample of core illustrative issues. Our central aim is to demonstrate how complexity within the language faculty arises from two a priori distinct sources: the computational complexity inherent in the grammar of the language system itself and the procedural complexity resulting from marshalling processing resources in order to produce or interpret utterances that correspond to the grammar. Distinguishing between these two sources of complexity is a current goal in investigations of the human language faculty. The combination of quantitative approaches with newer qualitative approaches to the analysis of electro-cortical behavior associated with carefully controlled language paradigms represents a new approach to clarifying this central issue.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 211
Author(s):  
Chinara Vagif Abdullayeva

“The English-Azerbaijani Dictionary” gives the following definitions for the words “causative” and “causation” in Azerbaijani: 1) Səbəbiyyət (act of causing); 2) Səbəblik (causation); 3) Hadisələr arasında səbəb əlaqəsi (causative relations among the events) [The English-Azerbaijani Dictionary, 2003]. Thus, by causativity or causation the linguistics mean the relations of cause and consequence. The category of cause and consequence has been attracting the attention of philosophers, textual critics and linguists since the antiquity. Bunge, who studied this category particularly, notes that the category of causation functions as a special type of mutual actions or mutual interdependence. The relation of cause and consequence as a philosophical category complete each other. As the human language reflects the realities, the relation of cause plays an important role as the category of time in the syntax of the sentence (Bunge, 1962).


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