Neville H J, Bavelier D
Psychology Department, University of Oregon, Eugene 97403-1227, USA.
Curr Opin Neurobiol. 1998 Apr;8(2):254-8. doi: 10.1016/s0959-4388(98)80148-7.
Powerful advances in neuroimaging techniques have added to and refined classical descriptions of the neurobiology of language in adults. Recent studies have employed these methodologies to study the nature and extent of plasticity of language-relevant aspects of cerebral organization in adults, in early and late bilinguals and in people who have acquired language through different modalities. Studies of children have documented dynamic shifts in cerebral organization over the course of language acquisition. Each of these different approaches has revealed constraints on the identity of the neural systems that mediate language; these studies have also described the marked and specific effects of language experience on the organization of these systems.