Current Biology,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
34(15), P. 3537 - 3549.e5
Published: July 23, 2024
Decoding
human
speech
requires
the
brain
to
segment
incoming
acoustic
signal
into
meaningful
linguistic
units,
ranging
from
syllables
and
words
phrases.
Integrating
these
constituents
a
coherent
percept
sets
root
of
compositional
meaning
hence
understanding.
One
important
cue
for
segmentation
in
natural
is
prosodic
cues,
such
as
pauses,
but
their
interplay
with
higher-level
processing
still
unknown.
Here,
we
dissociate
neural
tracking
pauses
multi-word
chunks
using
magnetoencephalography
(MEG).
We
find
that
manipulating
regularity
disrupts
slow
speech-brain
bilaterally
auditory
areas
(below
2
Hz)
turn
increases
left-lateralized
coherence
higher-frequency
activity
at
onsets
(around
25-45
Hz).
Critically,
also
chunks-defined
short,
bundles
inter-word
dependencies-are
processed
through
rhythmic
fluctuations
low-frequency
independently
cues.
Importantly,
alignment
chunk
accuracy
an
encoding
model
bilateral
frontal
while
controlling
effect
acoustics.
Our
findings
provide
novel
insights
basis
perception,
demonstrating
both
features
(prosodic
cues)
abstract
timescale
are
underpinned
by
electrophysiological
delta
frequency
range.
Scientific Data,
Journal Year:
2022,
Volume and Issue:
9(1)
Published: Aug. 29, 2022
Abstract
Two
analytic
traditions
characterize
fMRI
language
research.
One
relies
on
averaging
activations
across
individuals.
This
approach
has
limitations:
because
of
inter-individual
variability
in
the
locations
areas,
any
given
voxel/vertex
a
common
brain
space
is
part
network
some
individuals
but
others,
may
belong
to
distinct
network.
An
alternative
identifying
areas
each
individual
using
functional
‘localizer’.
Because
its
greater
sensitivity,
resolution,
and
interpretability,
localization
gaining
popularity,
it
not
always
feasible,
cannot
be
applied
retroactively
past
studies.
To
bridge
these
disjoint
approaches,
we
created
probabilistic
atlas
data
for
an
extensively
validated
localizer
806
enables
estimating
probability
that
location
belongs
network,
thus
can
help
interpret
group-level
activation
peaks
lesion
locations,
or
select
voxels/electrodes
analysis.
More
meaningful
comparisons
findings
studies
should
increase
robustness
replicability
Cerebral Cortex,
Journal Year:
2023,
Volume and Issue:
33(12), P. 7904 - 7929
Published: April 1, 2023
Language
and
music
are
two
human-unique
capacities
whose
relationship
remains
debated.
Some
have
argued
for
overlap
in
processing
mechanisms,
especially
structure
processing.
Such
claims
often
concern
the
inferior
frontal
component
of
language
system
located
within
"Broca's
area."
However,
others
failed
to
find
overlap.
Using
a
robust
individual-subject
fMRI
approach,
we
examined
responses
brain
regions
stimuli,
probed
musical
abilities
individuals
with
severe
aphasia.
Across
4
experiments,
obtained
clear
answer:
perception
does
not
engage
system,
judgments
about
possible
even
presence
damage
network.
In
particular,
regions'
generally
low,
below
fixation
baseline,
never
exceed
elicited
by
nonmusic
auditory
conditions,
like
animal
sounds.
Furthermore,
sensitive
structure:
they
show
low
both
intact
structure-scrambled
music,
melodies
vs.
without
structural
violations.
Finally,
line
past
patient
investigations,
aphasia,
who
cannot
judge
sentence
grammaticality,
perform
well
on
melody
well-formedness
judgments.
Thus,
mechanisms
that
process
do
appear
including
syntax.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
121(10)
Published: Feb. 29, 2024
During
real-time
language
comprehension,
our
minds
rapidly
decode
complex
meanings
from
sequences
of
words.
The
difficulty
doing
so
is
known
to
be
related
words’
contextual
predictability,
but
what
cognitive
processes
do
these
predictability
effects
reflect?
In
one
view,
reflect
facilitation
due
anticipatory
processing
words
that
are
predictable
context.
This
view
predicts
a
linear
effect
on
demand.
another
the
costs
probabilistic
inference
over
sentence
interpretations.
either
logarithmic
or
superlogarithmic
demand,
depending
whether
it
assumes
pressures
toward
uniform
distribution
information
time.
empirical
record
currently
mixed.
Here,
we
revisit
this
question
at
scale:
We
analyze
six
reading
datasets,
estimate
next-word
probabilities
with
diverse
statistical
models,
and
model
times
using
recent
advances
in
nonlinear
regression.
Results
support
word
difficulty,
which
favors
as
key
component
human
processing.
Cerebral Cortex,
Journal Year:
2022,
Volume and Issue:
33(8), P. 4384 - 4404
Published: Aug. 25, 2022
A
fronto-temporal
brain
network
has
long
been
implicated
in
language
comprehension.
However,
this
network's
role
production
remains
debated.
In
particular,
it
unclear
whether
all
or
only
some
regions
contribute
to
production,
and
which
aspects
of
these
support.
Across
3
functional
magnetic
resonance
imaging
experiments
that
rely
on
robust
individual-subject
analyses,
we
characterize
the
response
high-level
demands.
We
report
novel
results.
First,
sentence
spoken
typed,
elicits
a
strong
throughout
network.
Second,
responds
both
phrase-structure
building
lexical
access
demands,
although
is
stronger
more
spatially
extensive,
present
every
region.
Finally,
contra
proposals,
find
no
evidence
regions-within
outside
network-that
selectively
support
relative
Instead,
respond
strongly
during
than
comprehension,
suggesting
incurs
greater
cost
for
Together,
results
align
with
idea
comprehension
draw
same
knowledge
representations,
are
stored
distributed
manner
within
language-selective
used
interpret
generate
linguistic
utterances.
Trends in Cognitive Sciences,
Journal Year:
2023,
Volume and Issue:
27(11), P. 1032 - 1052
Published: Sept. 11, 2023
Prediction
is
often
regarded
as
an
integral
aspect
of
incremental
language
comprehension,
but
little
known
about
the
cognitive
architectures
and
mechanisms
that
support
it.
We
review
studies
showing
listeners
readers
use
all
manner
contextual
information
to
generate
multifaceted
predictions
upcoming
input.
The
nature
these
may
vary
between
individuals
owing
differences
in
experience,
among
other
factors.
then
turn
unresolved
questions
which
guide
search
for
underlying
mechanisms.
(i)
Is
prediction
essential
processing
or
optional
strategy?
(ii)
Are
generated
from
within
system
by
domain-general
processes?
(iii)
What
relationship
memory?
(iv)
Does
comprehension
require
simulation
via
production
system?
discuss
promising
directions
making
progress
answering
developing
a
mechanistic
understanding
language.
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
36(7), P. 1427 - 1471
Published: Jan. 1, 2024
Abstract
Human
language
is
expressive
because
it
compositional:
The
meaning
of
a
sentence
(semantics)
can
be
inferred
from
its
structure
(syntax).
It
commonly
believed
that
syntax
and
semantics
are
processed
by
distinct
brain
regions.
Here,
we
revisit
this
claim
using
precision
fMRI
methods
to
capture
separation
or
overlap
function
in
the
brains
individual
participants.
Contrary
prior
claims,
find
distributed
sensitivity
both
throughout
broad
frontotemporal
network.
Our
results
join
growing
body
evidence
for
an
integrated
network
human
within
which
internal
specialization
primarily
matter
degree
rather
than
kind,
contrast
with
influential
proposals
advocate
different
areas
types
linguistic
functions.
Annual Review of Neuroscience,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
47(1), P. 277 - 301
Published: April 26, 2024
It
has
long
been
argued
that
only
humans
could
produce
and
understand
language.
But
now,
for
the
first
time,
artificial
language
models
(LMs)
achieve
this
feat.
Here
we
survey
new
purchase
LMs
are
providing
on
question
of
how
is
implemented
in
brain.
We
discuss
why,
a
priori,
might
be
expected
to
share
similarities
with
human
system.
then
summarize
evidence
represent
linguistic
information
similarly
enough
enable
relatively
accurate
brain
encoding
decoding
during
processing.
Finally,
examine
which
LM
properties—their
architecture,
task
performance,
or
training—are
critical
capturing
neural
responses
review
studies
using
as
silico
model
organisms
testing
hypotheses
about
These
ongoing
investigations
bring
us
closer
understanding
representations
processes
underlie
our
ability
comprehend
sentences
express
thoughts
Cerebral Cortex,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
34(3)
Published: March 1, 2024
Abstract
How
do
polyglots—individuals
who
speak
five
or
more
languages—process
their
languages,
and
what
can
this
population
tell
us
about
the
language
system?
Using
fMRI,
we
identified
network
in
each
of
34
polyglots
(including
16
hyperpolyglots
with
knowledge
10+
languages)
examined
its
response
to
native
language,
non-native
languages
varying
proficiency,
unfamiliar
languages.
All
conditions
engaged
all
areas
relative
a
control
condition.
Languages
that
participants
rated
as
higher
proficiency
elicited
stronger
responses,
except
for
which
similar
lower
than
proficiency.
Furthermore,
were
typologically
related
participants’
high-to-moderate-proficiency
unrelated
The
results
suggest
network’s
magnitude
scales
degree
engagement
linguistic
computations
(e.g.
lexical
access
syntactic-structure
building).
We
also
replicated
prior
finding
weaker
responses
non-polyglot
bilinguals.
These
contribute
our
understanding
how
multiple
coexist
within
single
brain
provide
new
evidence
responds
strongly
stimuli
fully
engage
computations.