
Neurolinguistics Is A Young And Highly Interdisciplinary Field, With Influences From Psycholinguistics, Psychology, Aphasiology, And (cognitive) Neuroscience, As Well As Other Fields. Neurolinguistics, Like Psycholinguistics, Covers Aspects Of Language Processing; But Unlike Psycholinguistics, It Draws On Data From Patients With Damage To Language Processing Capacities, Or The Use Of Modern Neuroimaging Technologies Such As Fmri, Tms, Or Both. The Burgeoning Interest In Neurolinguistics Reflects That An Understanding Of The Neural Bases Of This Data Can Inform More Biologically Plausible Models Of The Human Capacity For Language. The Oxford Handbook Of Neurolinguistics Provides Concise Overviews Of This Rapidly-growing Field, And Engages A Broad Audience With An Interest In The Neurobiology Of Language. The Chapters Do Not Attempt To Provide Exhaustive Coverage, But Rather Present Discussions Of Prominent Questions Posed By Given Topics. The Volume Opens With Essential Methodological Chapters: Section I, Methods, Covers The Key Techniques And Technologies Used To Study The Neurobiology Of Language Today, With Chapters Structured Along The Basic Divisions Of The Field. Section Ii Addresses The Neurobiology Of Language Acquisition During Healthy Development And In Response To Challenges Presented By Congenital And Acquired Conditions. Section Iii Covers The Many Facets Of Our Articulate Brain, Or Speech-language Pathology, And The Capacity For Language Production-written, Spoken, And Signed. Questions Regarding How The Brain Comprehends Meaning, Including Emotions At Word And Discourse Levels, Are Addressed In Section Iv. Finally, Section V Reaches Into Broader Territory, Characterizing And Contextualizing The Neurobiology Of Language With Respect To More Fundamental Neuroanatomical Mechanisms And General Cognitive Domains.
This volume investigates the neural mechanisms underlying human language processing by synthesizing data from cognitive neuroscience, aphasiology, and psycholinguistics. Editors Greig I. de Zubicaray and Niels O. Schiller compile contributions from leading researchers to establish a framework for understanding how the brain supports language production and comprehension. The text argues that integrating neuroimaging data with clinical observations of language impairment is necessary to develop biologically plausible models of human communication.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this volume as a high-level reference for students and researchers seeking to understand the intersection of brain function and linguistic capacity. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which assumes a foundational knowledge of neurobiology and linguistics.
Page Count:
672
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019067203X
ISBN-13:
9780190672034
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