Literature DB >> 19076392

Signed language and human action processing: evidence for functional constraints on the human mirror-neuron system.

David P Corina1, Heather Patterson Knapp.   

Abstract

In the quest to further understand the neural underpinning of human communication, researchers have turned to studies of naturally occurring signed languages used in Deaf communities. The comparison of the commonalities and differences between spoken and signed languages provides an opportunity to determine core neural systems responsible for linguistic communication independent of the modality in which a language is expressed. The present article examines such studies, and in addition asks what we can learn about human languages by contrasting formal visual-gestural linguistic systems (signed languages) with more general human action perception. To understand visual language perception, it is important to distinguish the demands of general human motion processing from the highly task-dependent demands associated with extracting linguistic meaning from arbitrary, conventionalized gestures. This endeavor is particularly important because theorists have suggested close homologies between perception and production of actions and functions of human language and social communication. We review recent behavioral, functional imaging, and neuropsychological studies that explore dissociations between the processing of human actions and signed languages. These data suggest incomplete overlap between the mirror-neuron systems proposed to mediate human action and language.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19076392     DOI: 10.1196/annals.1416.023

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci        ISSN: 0077-8923            Impact factor:   5.691


  3 in total

1.  Altered intra- and inter-regional synchronization of superior temporal cortex in deaf people.

Authors:  Yanyan Li; James R Booth; Danling Peng; Yufeng Zang; Junhong Li; Chaogan Yan; Guosheng Ding
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2012-07-05       Impact factor: 5.357

Review 2.  Auditory object perception: A neurobiological model and prospective review.

Authors:  Julie A Brefczynski-Lewis; James W Lewis
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2017-04-30       Impact factor: 3.139

3.  The neurobiology of sign language and the mirror system hypothesis.

Authors:  Karen Emmorey
Journal:  Lang Cogn       Date:  2013-09-01
  3 in total

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