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Neurodevelopment of language: A comparison of Chinese and English

27 Mar 2019

Event
Neurodevelopment of language: A comparison of Chinese and English
  • Speaker: Prof. Tan Lihai
    (Director
    Shenzhen Institute of Neuroscience, Distinguished University Professor, Shenzhen University)
  • Overview:
    Contrary to the conventional wisdom, recent research indicates that experience can quickly change both human adult brains’ physical structure and functional organization. In this talk I will first summarize structural and functional MRI evidence from the study of the neurodevelopment of written Chinese and English which shows how brain networks change in response to language. I will then report on our experiments attempting to discover brain activity patterns during a reading-related task in 125 subjects aged from 6 to 74 years. We found that activations of cortical sites for reading all showed linearly decreasing changes with age. These findings suggest that very beginning readers at age 6-7 are already using the same cortical network as adults to process printed words. Our fMRI study has demonstrated for the first time a lifespan neurodevelopment of cognition (reading), and it provides strong evidence against the prominent hypothesis of human cortical specialization. I will also summarize our recent work of translating our basic brain research findings into clinical and education practices.
  • Date: 27 March 2019 (Wednesday)

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