Abstract
AbstractElucidating the internal representation of language in the brain has major implications for cognitive science, brain disorders, and artificial intelligence. A pillar of linguistic studies is the notion that words have defined functions, often referred to as parts of speech. Here we recorded invasive neurophysiological responses from 1,801 electrodes in 20 patients with epilepsy while they were presented with two-word phrases consisting of an adjective and a noun. We observed neural signals that distinguished between these two parts of speech. The selective signals were circumscribed within a small region in the left lateral orbitofrontal cortex. The representation of parts of speech showed invariance across visual and auditory presentation modalities, robustness to word properties like length, order, frequency, and semantics, and even generalized across different languages. This selective, invariant, and localized representation of parts of speech for nouns versus adjectives provides elements for the compositional processes of language.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory