4.7 Article

An investigation across 45 languages and 12 language families reveals a universal language network

Journal

NATURE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 25, Issue 8, Pages 1014-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41593-022-01114-5

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Funding

  1. la Caixa Fellowship [LCF/BQ/AA17/11610043]
  2. Friends of McGovern Fellowship
  3. Dingwall Foundation Fellowship
  4. NIH [R00-HD057522, R01-DC016607, R01-DC-NIDCD]
  5. Brain and Cognitive Sciences Department
  6. McGovern Institute for Brain Research
  7. Simons Center for the Social Brain

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This study examines the language brain areas across 45 different languages and finds similar topography, selectivity, and inter-connectedness among them. These similarities may enable the language system to handle shared linguistic features.
To understand the architecture of human language, it is critical to examine diverse languages; however, most cognitive neuroscience research has focused on only a handful of primarily Indo-European languages. Here we report an investigation of the fronto-temporo-parietal language network across 45 languages and establish the robustness to cross-linguistic variation of its topography and key functional properties, including left-lateralization, strong functional integration among its brain regions and functional selectivity for language processing. fMRI reveals similar topography, selectivity and inter-connectedness of language brain areas across 45 languages. These properties may allow the language system to handle the shared features of languages, shaped by biological and cultural evolution.

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