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  1. Why language survives as the dominant communication tool: A neurocognitive perspective.Qing Zhang & Edward Ruoyang Shi - 2021 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 44.
    By focusing on the contributions of subcortical structures, our commentary suggests that the functions of the hippocampus underlying “displacement,” a feature enabling humans to communicate things and situations that are remote in space and time, make language more effective at social bonding. Based on the functions of the basal ganglia and hippocampus, evolutionary trajectory of the subcomponents of music and language in different species will also be discussed.
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  • Understanding Language Reorganization With Neuroimaging: How Language Adapts to Different Focal Lesions and Insights Into Clinical Applications.Luca Pasquini, Alberto Di Napoli, Maria Camilla Rossi-Espagnet, Emiliano Visconti, Antonio Napolitano, Andrea Romano, Alessandro Bozzao, Kyung K. Peck & Andrei I. Holodny - 2022 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 16.
    When the language-dominant hemisphere is damaged by a focal lesion, the brain may reorganize the language network through functional and structural changes known as adaptive plasticity. Adaptive plasticity is documented for triggers including ischemic, tumoral, and epileptic focal lesions, with effects in clinical practice. Many questions remain regarding language plasticity. Different lesions may induce different patterns of reorganization depending on pathologic features, location in the brain, and timing of onset. Neuroimaging provides insights into language plasticity due to its non-invasiveness, ability (...)
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  • Action sequences instead of representational levels.Ruth Kempson & Eleni Gregoromichelaki - 2017 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 40.
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  • Mind–Language =? The significance of non‐verbal autism.Wolfram Hinzen, Dominika Slušná, Kristen Schroeder, Gabriel Sevilla & Elisabet Vila Borrellas - 2019 - Mind and Language 35 (4):514-538.
    The possibility and extent of thought without language have been subject to much controversy. Insight from non- or minimally verbal humans can inform this debate empirically. Since most such individuals are on the autism spectrum, of which they make up a sizable 25–30%, an important connection between language and autism transpires. Here we propose a model which makes sense of this link and explains why the non-verbal human mind, as present evidence suggests, represents a fundamentally different cognitive phenotype. This model (...)
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  • Sleep-Dependent Memory Consolidation and Incremental Sentence Comprehension: Computational Dependencies during Language Learning as Revealed by Neuronal Oscillations.Zachariah R. Cross, Mark J. Kohler, Matthias Schlesewsky, M. G. Gaskell & Ina Bornkessel-Schlesewsky - 2018 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 12.
  • Mental travels and the cognitive basis of language.Michael C. Corballis - 2018 - Interaction Studies 19 (1-2):352-369.
    I argue that a critical feature of language that distinguishes it from animal communication isdisplacement,the means to communicate about the non-present. This implies a capacity for mental travels in time and space, which is the ability to call to mind past episodes, imagine future ones or purely fictitious ones, and locate them in different places. While mental travel in time, in particular, is often considered to be unique to humans, behavioral and neurophysiological evidence suggests that it is evident in some (...)
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  • Language, Memory, and Mental Time Travel: An Evolutionary Perspective.Michael C. Corballis - 2019 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 13.
  • Effects of Linguistic Distance on Second Language Brain Activations in Bilinguals: An Exploratory Coordinate-Based Meta-Analysis.Elisa Cargnelutti, Barbara Tomasino & Franco Fabbro - 2022 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 15.
    In this quantitative meta-analysis, we used the activation likelihood estimation approach to address the effects of linguistic distance between first and second languages on language-related brain activations. In particular, we investigated how L2-related networks may change in response to linguistic distance from L1. Thus, we examined L2 brain activations in two groups of participants with English as L2 and either a European language or Chinese as L1. We further explored the modulatory effect of age of appropriation and proficiency of L2. (...)
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