Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1868644 Physics of Life Reviews 2012 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

This review concentrates on two different language dimensions: lexical/semantic and grammatical. This distinction between a lexical/semantic system and a grammatical system is well known in linguistics, but in cognitive neurosciences it has been obscured by the assumption that there are several forms of language disturbances associated with focal brain damage and hence language includes a diversity of functions (phoneme discrimination, lexical memory, grammar, repetition, language initiation ability, etc.), each one associated with the activity of a specific brain area. The clinical observation of patients with cerebral pathology shows that there are indeed only two different forms of language disturbances (disturbances in the lexical/semantic system and disturbances in the grammatical system); these two language dimensions are supported by different brain areas (temporal and frontal) in the left hemisphere. Furthermore, these two aspects of the language are developed at different ages during childʼs language acquisition, and they probably appeared at different historical moments during human evolution. Mechanisms of learning are different for both language systems: whereas the lexical/semantic knowledge is based in a declarative memory, grammatical knowledge corresponds to a procedural type of memory. Recognizing these two language dimensions can be crucial in understanding language evolution and human cognition.

► Human language has two different dimensions: lexical/semantic and grammatical. ► They are supported by different brain structures. ► In cases of brain pathology, each one can be independently impaired. ► The lexical/semantic language system appeared long before the contemporary man. ► Language grammar may be the departing ability for executive functions.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Physics and Astronomy (General)
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