How the human brain learns language
April 30th, 2010 - 12:41 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Apr 30 (ANI): There is no single advanced area of the human brain that gives it language capabilities above and beyond those of any other animal species, says a new study from the University of Rochester.
Instead, humans rely on several regions of the brain, each designed to accomplish different primitive tasks, in order to make sense of a sentence.
Depending on the type of grammar used in forming a given sentence, the brain will activate a certain set of regions to process it, like a carpenter digging through a toolbox to pick a group of tools to accomplish the various basic components that comprise a complex task.
“We’re using and adapting the machinery we already have in our brains,” said study coauthor Aaron Newman. “Obviously we’re doing something different [from other animals], because we’re able to learn language unlike any other species. But it’s not because some little black box evolved specially in our brain that does only language, and nothing else.”
The team of brain and cognitive scientists - comprised of Newman (now at Dalhousie University after beginning the work as a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Rochester), Elissa Newport (University of Rochester), Ted Supalla (University of Rochester), Daphne Bavelier (University of Rochester), and Peter Hauser (Rochester Institute of Technology) - published their findings in the latest edition of the journal Proceedings of the National Academies of Science. (ANI)
- Parents' 'um's' and 'uh's' help kids learn new words - Apr 15, 2011
- How video games can enhance our visual attention - Nov 18, 2010
- Fast-paced video games boost ability to concentrate - Nov 19, 2010
- Now, a camera that creates real-time, 3D colour movies of the brain! - Feb 05, 2011
- Action video games improve eyesight: study - Mar 31, 2009
- Video games 'help us make right decisions faster' - Sep 14, 2010
- Action-packed video games are good for eyes - Mar 30, 2009
- Man on Moon revolutionised ideas behind vehicles, medicine - Jul 16, 2009
- Video action games do improve vision: Study - Mar 30, 2009
- The world now has 8.7 mn species - Aug 24, 2011
- Video games help sharpen one's visual, cognitive skills - Dec 18, 2009
- Anti-depressants boost brain cells after injury - Apr 19, 2011
- Avid video game players 'faster, more accurate in real life' - Dec 18, 2009
- How brain learns and encodes new skills - Apr 14, 2011
- New method paints clearer picture of brain's language areas - May 16, 2010
Tags: aaron newman, animal species, brains, carpenter, cognitive scientists, daphne bavelier, elissa newport, grammar, human brain, institute of technology, journal proceedings, language capabilities, national academies of science, newport university, peter hauser, postdoctoral fellow, regions of the brain, rochester institute of technology, ted supalla, university of rochester