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The interest in understanding how language is "localized" in the brain has existed for centuries. Departing from seven meta-analytic studies of functional magnetic resonance imaging activity during the performance of different language activities, it is proposed here that there are two different language networks in the brain: first, a language reception/understanding system, including a "core Wernicke's area" involved in word recognition (BA21, BA22, BA41, and BA42), and a fringe or peripheral area ("extended Wernicke's area:" BA20, BA37, BA38, BA39, and BA40) involved in language associations (associating words with other information); second, a language production system ("Broca's complex:" BA44, BA45, and also BA46, BA47, partially BA6-mainly its mesial supplementary motor area-and extending toward the basal ganglia and the thalamus). This paper additionally proposes that the insula (BA13) plays a certain coordinating role in interconnecting these two brain language systems.
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Alfredo Ardila
Sechenov University
Byron Bernal
Boston Children's Hospital
Mónica Rosselli
Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative
Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology
Florida International University
Florida Atlantic University
Miami Children's Hospital
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Ardila et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69e1e4754b8daee8ab86b712 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/arclin/acv081