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Introduction: This paper provides proof of concept that neurolinguistic research on human language syntax would benefit greatly by expanding its scope to include evolutionary considerations, as well as non-propositional functions of language, including naming/nicknaming and verbal aggression. In particular, an evolutionary approach can help circumvent the so-called granularity problem in studying the processing of syntax in the brain, that is, the apparent mismatch between the abstract postulates of syntax (e.g. Tense Phrase (TP), Determiner Phrase (DP), etc.) and the concrete units of neurobiology (neurons, axons, etc.).
Methods: First, we decompose syntax into its evolutionary primitives, identifying one of the earliest stages as a simple, flat combination of just one verb and one noun. Next, we identify proxies ("living fossils") of such a stage in present-day languages, including compounds and small clauses, lacking at least some layers of structure, e.g. TPs and DPs. These proxies of ancestral language have been subjected to fMRI neuroimaging experiments.
Results: We discuss the finding that less hierarchical small clauses, in contrast to full sentences with TPs and DPs, show reduced activation in the left Broca's area (BA) 44 and the right basal ganglia, consistent with the hypothesis that more recent, more elaborate syntax requires more connectivity in the Broca's-basal ganglia network, whose neuronal density has been significantly enhanced in recent evolution, implicating mutations in FOXP2 and other genes. We also discuss the finding that the processing of ancestral verb-noun compounds, which are typically used for (derogatory) naming and nicknaming, shows enhanced activation in the right fusiform gyrus area (BA 37), the area that is implicated in the processing of metaphoricity and imageability, but also in naming and face recognition, opening up an intriguing possibility that the enhanced face recognition in humans was facilitated by the early emergence of a simple syntactic strategy for naming.
Discussion: The considerations in this paper are consistent with the hypothesis of a gradual gene-culture co-evolution of syntax and the brain, targeting cortico-striatal brain networks. It is also of note that a sound grounding in neurobiology of language should in turn inform syntactic theories themselves.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1445192 | DOI Listing |
Cortex
July 2025
Department of Psychology and Human Development, Peabody College, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA. Electronic address:
We examined longitudinal relations of brain and behavior assessing semantic and syntactic language bootstrapping in children from ages 7- to 10.5-years-old. This study is a direct extension of our earlier investigation on 5- to -7-year-old children (Wagley & Booth, 2021).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurosci
August 2025
Cooperative Brain Imaging Center, Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main, D-60590 Germany.
The human brain must add information to the acoustic speech signal in order to understand language. Many accounts propose that the prosodic structure of utterances (including their syllabic rhythm and speech melody), in combination with stored lexical knowledge, cue and interact with higher order abstract semantic and syntactic information. While cortical rhythms, particularly in the delta and theta band, synchronize to quasi-rhythmic low-level acoustic speech features, it remains unclear how the human brain encodes abstract speech properties in neural rhythms in the absence of an acoustic signal, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCogn Sci
August 2025
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
We report the results of two acceptability judgment experiments on English materials, which were designed in order to help disentangle predictions of syntactic theories with transformations from nontransformational theories. The materials in these experiments were motivated from examples from Pickering & Barry (1991), who provided intuitive evidence that there is little processing cost for connecting a fronted prepositional phrase to its verb, even if it is the second postverbal argument of a verb in the declarative form. For example, the PP on which connects to the verb put in the sentence This is the saucer on which Mary put the cup into which she poured the milk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Res Methods
August 2025
Department of Psychology, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main, Theodor-W.-Adorno-Platz 6, Frankfurt am Main, 60623, Germany.
To investigate how the human brain encodes the complex dynamics of natural languages, any viable and reproducible analysis pipeline must rely on either manual annotations or natural language processing (NLP) tools, which extract relevant physical (e.g., acoustic, gestural), and structure-building information from speech and language signals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurosci Biobehav Rev
September 2025
Department of Biostatistics & Health Informatics, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, UK.
Background: Previous research has indicated that individuals with depression and anxiety disorders may similarly changes in brain connectivity compared to healthy control. These patterns of altered connectivity may emerge upon disorder onset in adolescence. Establishing shared and specific patterns at this early stage can help investigate underlying biological processes, with implications for intervention, but remaining unclear whether adolescent MDD and AD are associated with similar or distinct functional connectivity patterns.
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