Continuity,divergence,and the evolution of brain language pathways

James Rilling, Matthew Glasser, Saad Jbabdi, Jesper Andersson, Todd Preuss

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

116 Scopus citations

Abstract

Recently, the assumption of evolutionary continuity between humans and non-human primates has been used to bolster the hypothesis that human language is mediated espe-cially by the ventral extreme capsule pathway that mediates auditory object recognition in macaques. Here, we argue for the importance of evolutionary divergence in understand-ing brain language evolution. We present new comparative data reinforcing our previous conclusion that the dorsal arcuate fasciculus pathway was more significantly modified than the ventral extreme capsule pathway in human evolution.Twenty-six adult human and twenty-six adult chimpanzees were imaged with diffusion-weighted MRI and probabilistic tractography was used to track and compare the dorsal and ventral language pathways. Based on these and other data, we argue that the arcuate fasciculus is likely to be the pathway most essential for higher-order aspects of human language such as syntax and lexical-semantics.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberArticle 11
JournalFrontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
Volume3
Issue numberJAN
DOIs
StatePublished - 2012

Keywords

  • Arcuate fasciculus
  • Brain
  • Chimpanzee
  • Evolution
  • Extreme capsule
  • Language

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