Authors
G Dehaene-Lambertz, A Montavont, A Jobert, L Allirol, J Dubois, L Hertz-Pannier
Publication date
2010/8/31
Journal
Brain and language
Volume
114
Issue
2
Pages
53-65
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
Understanding how language emerged in our species calls for a detailed investigation of the initial specialization of the human brain for speech processing. Our earlier research demonstrated that an adult-like left-lateralized network of perisylvian areas is already active when infants listen to sentences in their native language, but did not address the issue of the specialization of this network for speech processing. Here we used fMRI to study the organization of brain activity in two-month-old infants when listening to speech or to music. We also explored how infants react to their mother’s voice relative to an unknown voice. The results indicate that the well-known structural asymmetry already present in the infants’ posterior temporal areas has a functional counterpart: there is a left-hemisphere advantage for speech relative to music at the level of the planum temporale. The posterior temporal regions are thus …
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