Lecture 23: Language & Brain I
Some interesting links for this week:
- The story of Phineas Gage (from Discover magazine)
- Functional Neuroanatomy (a quick overview with
excellent illustrations from the Univ. of Texas, San Antonio)
- Neuroscience for Kids homepage (very nice site -- brain
science for the rest of us)
Outline
- Bird brains
- Left-brain, right-brain
- Aphasia: disorders of language due to brain-damage
(how careful linguistic analysis has led to better understanding of language
disorders)
Related, but different, questions about human brain and language
1. Clinical
- What will a person be unable to do if he/she suffers brain damage affecting
language
- What are the chances of recovery? (Is this affected by age, gender
etc.?)
- If part of the brain needs to be surgically removed (e.g., in order
to control severe epilepsy, or to remove a brain tumor), which parts of
the brain must be spared for language to be preserved?
2. Scientific
- Why do specific types of damage cause specific problems?
- What can this teach us about how the human mind is organized?
- What can this teach us about the organization of human language?
Comparison with Birdsong (again)
Song Sparrow
- critical period; interaction of nature (innate abilities) with environment
(input)
- Special properties of song due to special properties of Song Sparrow's
brain
Brains of Songbirds
- Song areas very well defined
- Specific functions understood
- Known how they develop
- Understood down to level of single neurons
Brains of Humans
- Situation with humans is less clear
- Some understanding of critical brain structures
- a good deal of interesting clues to what the function of these structures
is
- Many things very unclear
- Little known about development of language in the brain
- ...part of the problem is in our level of understanding of human language

Outline of human brain
Cortex
- evolutionarily later
- supports "higher" brain functions, including language
- thin, folded sheet on surface of brain
Hemispheres
- 2 sides of brain: roughly symmetrical
Lobes and smaller areas of brain
- frontal, temporal, parietal, occipital
Microstructures: neurons, networks
- ~10 billion neurons in human brain
Left-brain, Right-brain
- Left-hemisphere dominance for language
- Language damage far more likely following left-hemisphere damage
- Not so true in left-handers (around 50% show switched dominance)
- Not true in children
- severe left-hemisphere damage (or loss) early in life: recovery very
likely
- therefore: Left Hemisphere specialization isn't fixed at birth
... emerges in development
- Not entirely clear in females
- LH damage: better chance for recovery of language functions than males
- Recent fMRI evidence suggests that some but not all language
functions may be less lateralized to the left hemisphere in females
- However, this evidence -- while intriguing -- does not justify exaggerated
conclusions drawn in the popular media. It most definitely does not lead
to the conclusion that "men and women think differently", at
least in the way that this common prejudice is generally thought of.
Broca's Aphasia
- Identified 1861 by Paul Broca, a Parisian neurologist
- Patient "Tan": intelligent, good language comprehension,
severe deficit in speech production
- Died soon afterwards: brain showed selective damage at junction of
frontal, parietal, tempral lobes, left hemisphere
Typical clinical symptoms of Broca's aphasics
- "Yes ... Monday ... Dad, and Dad ... hospital, and ... Wednesday,
Wednesday, nine o'clock and ... Thursday, ten o'clock ... doctors, two,
two ... doctors and ... teeth, yah. And a doctor ... girl, and gums, and
I."
-
- "Me ... build-ing ... chairs, no, no cab-in-ets. One, saw ...
then, cutting wood ... working ..."
Wernicke's Aphasia
- Identified 1873 by Carl Wernicke, eminent German neurologist
- Patient with reasonably good speech, very poor language comprehension
- Died soon afterwards: brain showed selective damage in rear parietal/temporal
region, left hemisphere
Typical symptoms of Wernicke's aphasics
- Examiner: What kind of work have you done?
- Patient: We, the kids, all of us, and I, we were working for
a long time in the ... you know ... it's the kind of space, I mean place
rear to the spedawn ...
- Examiner: Excuse me, but I wanted to know what work you have
been doing.
- Patient: If you had said that, we had said that, poomer, near
the fortunate, porpunate, tamppoo, all around the fourth of martz. Oh,
I get all confused.
Classical Understanding of Language in the Brain, based on Aphasias
Broca's Area: responsible for speech production (close to motor
areas)
Wernicke's Area: responsible for speech comprehension (close to
auditory areas)
Striking confirmation: Conduction Aphasia
- often associated with damage to Arcuate Fasciculus -- a tract of fiberts
connecting BA and WA
- patients reported to show good comprehension, good production, poor
repetition
Revised Understanding of Aphasia (to be discussed on 12/9)
Wernicke's patients clearly don't have just a comprehension problem
- a. speech is typically somewhat incoherent
-
- b. patients perform very poorly on semantic judgments
-
- dog cat turnip
- man woman trout
--> deficit may be in semantic component of language
Broca's patients turn out to have a comprehension problem, when
carefully tested
- a. passive sentences
-
- i. The dog chased the cat
- ii. The girl threw the ball
-
- iii. The cat was chased by the dog
- iv. The ball was thrown by the girl
-
- --> using word-order 'strategies' rather than syntax
-
- b. attention to determiners
-
- i. He showed her baby pictures
-
- ii. He showed her the baby pictures
- iii. He showed her baby the pictures
--> deficit may be in syntactic component of language