Language and the Brain
Chapter 3: Language and the Brain
3.1 Evidence from Damage to the Brain
- The case of Phineas Gage
- Box 3.1: Phineas Gage and his brain
- Language at Large 3.1 One hundred names for love: Aphasia strikes a literary couple
- Language localization: Broca and Wernicke
- Creating brain maps for language
- Brain lateralization
- Method 3.1: The need for language diversity in aphasia research
- 3.1 Questions to Contemplate
3.2 Mapping the Healthy Human Brain
- Localizing language: Brain mapping techniques
- Method 3.2: Comparing apples and oranges in fMRI
- Language function is distributed throughout the brain in complex networks
- Language relies on the interaction of separate knowledge systems
- Box 3.2: The functional neuroanatomy of language
- Brain organization for language is both specialized and flexible
- Language at Large 3.2: Brain bunk: Separating science from pseudoscience
- Putting together the what, where, and how of brain functioning
- Box 3.3: Are Broca and Wernicke dead?
- 3.2 Questions to Contemplate
3.3 The Brain in Real-Time Action
- Measuring electrical brain activity in response to language
- Using ERPs to learn the timing of brain processes
- Identifying ERP components for linguistic functions: The N400 and P600 effects
- Is it just language?
- Language at Large 3.3: Using EEG to assess patients in a vegetative state
- Box 3.4: A musical P600 effect
- Researchers at Work 3.1: Using ERPs to detect cross-language activation
- 3.3 Questions to Contemplate
- Digging Deeper: Language and music
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