AUTHOR=Obrig Hellmuth , Rossi Sonja , Telkemeyer Silke , Wartenburger Isabell TITLE=From acoustic segmentation to language processing: evidence from optical imaging JOURNAL=Frontiers in Neuroenergetics VOLUME=2 YEAR=2010 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/neuroenergetics/articles/10.3389/fnene.2010.00013 DOI=10.3389/fnene.2010.00013 ISSN=1662-6427 ABSTRACT=
During language acquisition in infancy and when learning a foreign language, the segmentation of the auditory stream into words and phrases is a complex process. Intuitively, learners use “anchors” to segment the acoustic speech stream into meaningful units like words and phrases. Regularities on a segmental (e.g., phonological) or suprasegmental (e.g., prosodic) level can provide such anchors. Regarding the neuronal processing of these two kinds of linguistic cues a left-hemispheric dominance for segmental and a right-hemispheric bias for suprasegmental information has been reported in adults. Though lateralization is common in a number of higher cognitive functions, its prominence in language may also be a key to understanding the rapid emergence of the language network in infants and the ease at which we master our language in adulthood. One question here is whether the hemispheric lateralization is driven by linguistic input