Author:
Forgács Bálint,Tauzin Tibor,Gergely György,Gervain Judit
Abstract
AbstractRecent studies demonstrated neural systems in bilateral fronto-temporal brain areas in newborns specialized to extract linguistic structure from speech. We hypothesized that these mechanisms show additional sensitivity when identically structured different pseudowords are used communicatively in a turn-taking exchange by two speakers. In an fNIRS experiment newborns heard pseudowords sharing ABB repetition structure in three conditions: two voices turn-takingly exchanged different pseudowords (Communicative); the different pseudowords were produced by a (Single Speaker); two voices turn-takingly repeated identical pseudowords (Echoing). Here we show that left fronto-temporal regions (including Broca’s area) responded more to the Communicative than the other conditions. The results demonstrate that newborns’ left hemisphere brain areas show additional activation when various pseudowords sharing identical structure are exchanged in turn-taking alternation by two speakers. This indicates that language processing brain areas at birth are not only sensitive to the structure but to the functional use of language: communicative information transmission. Newborns appear to be equipped not only with innate systems to identify the structural properties of language but to identify its use, communication itself, that is, information exchange between third party social agents—even outside of the mother–infant dyad.
Funder
Fondation Fyssen
Nemzeti Kutatási Fejlesztési és Innovációs Hivatal
European Research Council,European Union
European Research Council
Human Frontier Science Program,France
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
37 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. The Argument from Prepared Learning;The Building Blocks of Thought;2024-08-22
2. The Evolution of Fodor’s Case against Concept Learning;The Building Blocks of Thought;2024-08-22
3. Conclusion to Part III;The Building Blocks of Thought;2024-08-22
4. Embodied Cognition;The Building Blocks of Thought;2024-08-22
5. Coda;The Building Blocks of Thought;2024-08-22