𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Broca's arrow: Evolution, prediction, and language in the brain

✍ Scribed by Cooper, David L.


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
359 KB
Volume
289B
Category
Article
ISSN
1552-4906

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Brodmann's areas 44 and 45 in the human brain, also known as Broca's area, have long been associated with language functions, especially in the left hemisphere. However, the precise role Broca's area plays in human language has not been established with certainty. Broca's area has homologs in the great apes and in area F5 in monkeys, which suggests that its original function was not linguistic at all. In fact, great ape and hominid brains show very similar left‐over‐right asymmetries in Broca's area homologs as well as in other areas, such as homologs to Wernicke's area, that are normally associated with language in modern humans. Moreover, the so‐called mirror neurons are located in Broca's area in great apes and area F5 in monkeys, which seem to provide a representation of cause and effect in a primate's environment, particularly its social environment. Humans appear to have these mirror neurons in Broca's area as well. Similarly, genetic evidence related to the FOXP2 gene implicates Broca's area in linguistic function and dysfunction, but the gene itself is a highly conserved developmental gene in vertebrates and is shared with only two or three differences between humans and great apes, five between humans and mice, and eight between humans and songbirds. Taking neurons and portions of the brain as discrete computational segments in the sense of constituting specific Turing machines, this evidence points to a predictive motor and conceptual function for Broca's area in primates, especially for social concepts. In human language, this is consistent with evidence from typological and cognitive linguistics. Anat Rec (Part B: New Anat) 289B:9–24, 2006. Β© 2006 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Essential language function of the right
✍ Alexander Thiel; Birgit Habedank; Lutz Winhuisen; Karl Herholz; Josef Kessler; W πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 2004 πŸ› John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English βš– 96 KB πŸ‘ 1 views

## Abstract Neuroimaging studies of language networks in patients with brain lesions of the left language‐dominant hemisphere have shown activation in the right inferior frontal gyrus (IFG). We tested the functional relevance of right IFG activation using neuroimaging‐guided repetitive transcranial

Progress in the study of brain evolution
✍ Striedter, Georg F. πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 1998 πŸ› John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English βš– 155 KB πŸ‘ 1 views

Darwin's theory of evolution raised the question of how the human brain differs from that of other animals and how it is the same. Early students of brain evolution had constructed rather grand but speculative theories which stated that brains evolved in a linear manner, from fish to man and from si