
The Neurocognition of Language is the first critical overview of the cognitive neuroscience of language, one of the fastest-moving and most exciting areas in language research today. And it is a necessity for anyone requiring a summary of our current understanding of the relation between language and the brain. It brings together human language experts who discuss the representations and structures of language as well as the cognitive architectures that underlie speaking, listening, and reading. In addition to valuable reviews of existing brain imaging literature on word and sentence processing and contributions from brain lesion data, this book provides a basis for future brain imaging research. It even explains the prospects and problems of brain imaging techniques for the study of language, presents some of the most recent and promising analytic procedures for relating brain imaging data to the higher cognitive functions, and contains a review of the neuroanatomical structure of Broca's language area. Uniquely interdisciplinary, this book offers researchers and students in cognitive neuroscience with state-of-the-art reviews of the major language functions, while being of equal interest to researchers in linguistics and language who want to learn about language's neural bases.
This text investigates the intersection of cognitive neuroscience and linguistics to establish a comprehensive framework for understanding how the human brain processes language. Editors Colin M. Brown and Peter Hagoort assemble a collection of contributions from leading experts to synthesize existing research on the neural mechanisms of speaking, listening, and reading. The book evaluates current brain imaging techniques and lesion data to provide a rigorous foundation for future empirical inquiry into higher cognitive functions.
What You Will Find
Experts identify this volume as a foundational text for students and researchers navigating the intersection of linguistics and neuroscience. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a rigorous reference for those seeking a technical overview of language-brain relations.
Page Count:
424
Publication Date:
2000-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0198507933
ISBN-13:
9780198507932
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