Using fMRI, neuroscientists confirm that language processing involves distinct neural populations with varying functions, identifiable by their unique 'temporal windows' for word context.
The research indicates that different clusters of neurons have varying responsibilities in language processing, with shorter temporal windows focused on individual word meanings and longer windows on more complex linguistic structures.
This study provides significant evidence of structural diversity within the brain's language network, challenging previous assumptions of uniformity derived from fMRI studies.
There is now a clear indication that while many fMRI experiments suggested brain areas served a single purpose, the reality is a complex, interleaved structure.
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