Plasticity of the language system in children and adults

Handb Clin Neurol. 2022:184:397-414. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-12-819410-2.00021-7.

Abstract

The language system is perhaps the most unique feature of the human brain's cognitive architecture. It has long been a quest of cognitive neuroscience to understand the neural components that contribute to the hierarchical pattern processing and advanced rule learning required for language. The most important goal of this research is to understand how language becomes impaired when these neural components malfunction or are lost to stroke, and ultimately how we might recover language abilities under these circumstances. Additionally, understanding how the language system develops and how it can reorganize in the face of brain injury or dysfunction could help us to understand brain plasticity in cognitive networks more broadly. In this chapter we will discuss the earliest features of language organization in infants, and how deviations in typical development can-but in some cases, do not-lead to disordered language. We will then survey findings from adult stroke and aphasia research on the potential for recovering language processing in both the remaining left hemisphere tissue and in the non-dominant right hemisphere. Altogether, we hope to present a clear picture of what is known about the capacity for plastic change in the neurobiology of the human language system.

Keywords: Aphasia; Language; Language development; Network reorganization; Neural injury; Neural plasticity.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Aphasia*
  • Brain
  • Child
  • Humans
  • Language
  • Language Disorders*
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  • Neuronal Plasticity
  • Stroke* / complications