Literature DB >> 17395577

Morphology, language and the brain: the decompositional substrate for language comprehension.

William D Marslen-Wilson1, Lorraine K Tyler.   

Abstract

This paper outlines a neurocognitive approach to human language, focusing on inflectional morphology and grammatical function in English. Taking as a starting point the selective deficits for regular inflectional morphology of a group of non-fluent patients with left hemisphere damage, we argue for a core decompositional network linking left inferior frontal cortex with superior and middle temporal cortex, connected via the arcuate fasciculus. This network handles the processing of regularly inflected words (such as joined or treats), which are argued not to be stored as whole forms and which require morpho-phonological parsing in order to segment complex forms into stems and inflectional affixes. This parsing process operates early and automatically upon all potential inflected forms and is triggered by their surface phonological properties. The predictions of this model were confirmed in a further neuroimaging study, using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), on unimpaired young adults. The salience of grammatical morphemes for the language system is highlighted by new research showing that similarly early and blind segmentation also operates for derivationally complex forms (such as darkness or rider). These findings are interpreted as evidence for a hidden decompositional substrate to human language processing and related to a functional architecture derived from non-human primate models.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17395577      PMCID: PMC2430000          DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2007.2091

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8436            Impact factor:   6.237


  64 in total

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Review 3.  The anatomy of language: contributions from functional neuroimaging.

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5.  Processing objects at different levels of specificity.

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Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 3.225

6.  Temporal and frontal systems in speech comprehension: an fMRI study of past tense processing.

Authors:  Lorraine K Tyler; Emmanuel A Stamatakis; Brechtje Post; Billi Randall; William Marslen-Wilson
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2005-04-18       Impact factor: 3.139

7.  Cingulate control of fronto-temporal integration reflects linguistic demands: a three-way interaction in functional connectivity.

Authors:  E A Stamatakis; W D Marslen-Wilson; L K Tyler; P C Fletcher
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2005-07-14       Impact factor: 6.556

8.  Determinants of dominance: is language laterality explained by physical or linguistic features of speech?

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Authors:  Peter Bright; Helen E Moss; Olivia Longe; Emmanuel A Stamatakis; Lorraine K Tyler
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2006-06-13       Impact factor: 5.357

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  48 in total

1.  The role of Broca's area in regular past-tense morphology: an event-related potential study.

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Review 2.  From cognitive to neural models of working memory.

Authors:  Mark D'Esposito
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2007-05-29       Impact factor: 6.237

3.  Electrophysiological evidence for the morpheme-based combinatoric processing of English compounds.

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4.  Communication and the primate brain: insights from neuroimaging studies in humans, chimpanzees and macaques.

Authors:  Benjamin Wilson; Christopher I Petkov
Journal:  Hum Biol       Date:  2011-04       Impact factor: 0.553

5.  How Linearity and Structural Complexity Interact and Affect the Recognition of Italian Derived Words.

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Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res       Date:  2017-02

6.  Neurocognitive correlates of category ambiguous verb processing: The single versus dual lexical entry hypotheses.

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Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  2019-05-16       Impact factor: 2.381

7.  Towards a computational(ist) neurobiology of language: Correlational, integrated, and explanatory neurolinguistics.

Authors:  David Embick; David Poeppel
Journal:  Lang Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2015-05-01       Impact factor: 2.331

8.  Reorganization of syntactic processing following left-hemisphere brain damage: does right-hemisphere activity preserve function?

Authors:  Lorraine K Tyler; Paul Wright; Billi Randall; William D Marslen-Wilson; Emmanuel A Stamatakis
Journal:  Brain       Date:  2010-09-24       Impact factor: 13.501

9.  Spatiotemporal signatures of large-scale synfire chains for speech processing as revealed by MEG.

Authors:  Friedemann Pulvermüller; Yury Shtyrov
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2008-05-05       Impact factor: 5.357

10.  Preserving syntactic processing across the adult life span: the modulation of the frontotemporal language system in the context of age-related atrophy.

Authors:  Lorraine K Tyler; Meredith A Shafto; Billi Randall; Paul Wright; William D Marslen-Wilson; Emmanuel A Stamatakis
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2009-06-08       Impact factor: 5.357

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