Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- The Neuroscience of Language
- 1 A Guide to the Book
- 2 Neuronal Structure and Function
- 3 From Classic Aphasia Research to Modern Neuroimaging
- 4 Words in the Brain
- Excursus E1 Explaining Neuropsychological Double Dissociations
- 5 Regulation, Overlap, and Web Tails
- 6 Neural Algorithms and Neural Networks
- 7 Basic Syntax
- 8 Synfire Chains as the Basis of Serial Order in the Brain
- 9 Sequence Detectors
- 10 Neuronal Grammar
- 11 Neuronal Grammar and Algorithms
- Excursus E2 Basic Bits of Neuronal Grammar
- Excursus E3 A Web Response to a Sentence
- 12 Refining Neuronal Grammar
- Excursus E4 Multiple Reverberation for Resolving Lexical Ambiguity
- Excursus E5 Multiple Reverberations and Multiple Center Embeddings
- 13 Neurophysiology of Syntax
- 14 Linguistics and the Brain
- References
- Abbreviations
- Author Index
- Subject Index
10 - Neuronal Grammar
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- The Neuroscience of Language
- 1 A Guide to the Book
- 2 Neuronal Structure and Function
- 3 From Classic Aphasia Research to Modern Neuroimaging
- 4 Words in the Brain
- Excursus E1 Explaining Neuropsychological Double Dissociations
- 5 Regulation, Overlap, and Web Tails
- 6 Neural Algorithms and Neural Networks
- 7 Basic Syntax
- 8 Synfire Chains as the Basis of Serial Order in the Brain
- 9 Sequence Detectors
- 10 Neuronal Grammar
- 11 Neuronal Grammar and Algorithms
- Excursus E2 Basic Bits of Neuronal Grammar
- Excursus E3 A Web Response to a Sentence
- 12 Refining Neuronal Grammar
- Excursus E4 Multiple Reverberation for Resolving Lexical Ambiguity
- Excursus E5 Multiple Reverberations and Multiple Center Embeddings
- 13 Neurophysiology of Syntax
- 14 Linguistics and the Brain
- References
- Abbreviations
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Summary
Large, strongly connected groups of neurons were proposed to form the neurobiological substrate of higher cognitive processes in general and language in particular. If the reader wishes, the ultimate answer to the question of language, the brain, and everything was suggested to be neuronal ensemble. Different authors define terms such as neuron ensemble, cell assembly, and neuronal group in different ways, and therefore a new term, functional web, was proposed and its meaning clarified (see Chapters 2, 5, and 8). There is support for the concept of functional webs from neurophysiological and neuroimaging experiments on language and memory (see Chapters 2 and 4). In this chapter, the notion of a functional web is used as a starting point for a serial-order model. The elements of this model are called neuronal sets. Neuronal sets are functional webs with additional special properties that are relevant for serial-order processing. Neuronal sets can represent sequences of words and are then called sequence sets (or alternatively, sequencing units, or sequence detectors). New terms are introduced to distinguish the entity that has empirical support (functional web) from the theoretical concept developed (neuronal set).
In this chapter, the notions neuronal set and sequence set are explained and applied to introduce a putative basic mechanism of grammar in the brain. Properties of functional webs are first briefly summarized, and then the concept of a neuronal set is defined as a special type of functional web.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Neuroscience of LanguageOn Brain Circuits of Words and Serial Order, pp. 168 - 206Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003