Words and Gestures Processed by Same Brain Regions
November 2009
Editor: This sure makes a lot of sense to me. I thought learning ASL
was very much like learning a spoken language, so it sounds right that the
same parts of the brain are doing the processing.
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Your ability to make sense of Groucho's words and Harpo's pantomimes in
an old Marx Brothers movie takes place in the same regions of your brain,
says new research funded by the National Institute on Deafness and Other
Communication Disorders (NIDCD), one of the National Institutes of Health.
In a study published in this week's Early Edition of Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), researchers have shown that the brain
regions that have long been recognized as a center in which spoken or
written words are decoded are also important in interpreting wordless
gestures. The findings suggest that these brain regions may play a much
broader role in the interpretation of symbols than researchers have
thought and, for this reason, could be the evolutionary starting point
from which language originated.
"In babies, the ability to communicate through gestures precedes spoken
language, and you can predict a child's language skills based on the
repertoire of his or her gestures during those early months," said James
F. Battey, Jr., M.D., Ph.D., director of the NIDCD. "These findings not
only provide compelling evidence regarding where language may have come
from, they help explain the interplay that exists between language and
gesture as children develop their language skills."
Scientists have known that sign language is largely processed in the
same regions of the brain as spoken language. These regions include the
inferior frontal gyrus, or Broca's area, in the front left side of the
brain, and the posterior temporal region, commonly referred to as
Wernicke's area, toward the back left side of the brain. It isn't
surprising that signed and spoken language activate the same brain
regions, because sign language operates in the same way as spoken language
does - with its own vocabulary and rules of grammar.
In this study, NIDCD researchers, in collaboration with scientists from
Hofstra University School of Medicine, Hempstead, N.Y., and San Diego
State University, wanted to find out if non-language-related gestures -
the hand and body movements we use that convey meaning on their own,
without having to be translated into specific words or phrases - are
processed in the same regions of the brain as language is. Two types of
gestures were considered for the study: pantomimes, which mimic objects or
actions, such as unscrewing a jar or juggling balls, and emblems, which
are commonly used in social interactions and which signify abstract,
usually more emotionally charged concepts than pantomimes. Examples
include a hand sweeping across the forehead to indicate "it's hot in
here!" or a finger to the lips to signify "be quiet."
While inside a functional MRI machine, 20 healthy, English-speaking
volunteers - nine males and 11 females - watched video clips of a person
either acting out one of the two gesture types or voicing the phrases that
the gestures represent. As controls, volunteers also watched clips of the
person using meaningless gestures or speaking pseudowords that had been
chopped up and randomly reorganized so the brain would not interpret them
as language. Volunteers watched 60 video clips for each of the six
stimuli, with the clips presented in 45-second time blocks at a rate of 15
clips per block. A mirror attached to the head enabled the volunteer to
watch the video projected on the scanner room wall. The scientists then
measured brain activity for each of the stimuli and looked for
similarities and differences as well as any communication occurring
between individual parts of the brain.
The researchers found that for the gesture and spoken language stimuli,
the brain was highly activated in the inferior frontal and posterior
temporal areas, the long-recognized language regions of the brain.
"If gesture and language were not processed by the same system, you'd
have spoken language activating the inferior frontal and posterior
temporal areas, and gestures activating other parts of the brain," said
Allen Braun, M.D., senior author on the paper, "But in fact we found
virtual overlap."
Current thinking in the study of language is that, like a smart search
engine that pops up the most suitable Web site at the top of its search
results, the posterior temporal region serves as a storehouse of words
from which the inferior frontal gyrus selects the most appropriate match.
The researchers suggest that, rather than being limited to deciphering
words alone, these regions may be able to apply meaning to any incoming
symbols, be they words, gestures, images, sounds, or objects. According to
Dr. Braun, these regions also may present a clue into how language
evolved.
"Our results fit a longstanding theory which says that the common
ancestor of humans and apes communicated through meaningful gestures and,
over time, the brain regions that processed gestures became adapted for
using words," he said. "If the theory is correct, our language areas may
actually be the remnant of this ancient communication system, one that
continues to process gesture as well as language in the human brain."
Dr. Braun adds that developing a better understanding of the brain
systems that support gestures and words may help in the treatment of some
patients with aphasia, a disorder that hinders a person's ability to
produce or understand language.
NIDCD supports and conducts research and research training on the
normal and disordered processes of hearing, balance, smell, taste, voice,
speech and language and provides health information, based upon scientific
discovery, to the public. For more information about NIDCD programs, see
the Web site at www.nidcd.nih.gov.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) - The Nation's Medical Research
Agency - includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services. It is the primary federal agency
for conducting and supporting basic, clinical and translational medical
research, and it investigates the causes, treatments, and cures for both
common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs,
visit www.nih.gov.