Department of Psychology, Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Department of Psychology, Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Brain Lang. 2023 Apr;239:105242. doi: 10.1016/j.bandl.2023.105242. Epub 2023 Mar 15.
Language, or the diverse set of dynamic processes through which symbolic, perceptual codes are linked to meaning representations in memory, has long been assumed to be lateralized to the left hemisphere (LH). However, after over 150 years of investigation, we still lack a unifying account of when, and for whom, a particular linguistic process relies upon LH or right hemisphere (RH) computations, or both. With a focus on individual differences, this article integrates existing theories of hemispheric contributions to language and cognition into a novel proposed framework for understanding how, when, and for whom the RH contributes to linguistic processes. We use evidence from first and second language learning and language relearning following focal brain damage to highlight the critical contributions of the RH.
语言,或者说是一套将符号、感知代码与记忆中的意义表示联系起来的动态过程,长期以来一直被认为是偏向于左半球(LH)的。然而,经过 150 多年的研究,我们仍然缺乏一个统一的解释,说明何时以及对于哪些人来说,特定的语言过程依赖于左半球或右半球(RH)的计算,或者两者都依赖。本文以个体差异为重点,将现有的关于语言和认知的半球贡献理论整合到一个新的框架中,以理解右半球是如何、何时以及对于哪些人有助于语言过程的。我们利用来自第一语言和第二语言学习以及大脑局部损伤后语言再学习的证据,突出了右半球的关键贡献。