By Sydney M. Lamb
Amsterdam/Philadephia: John Benjamins
January 1999 (xii+418 pages)
The brain is the organ of knowledge and organizer of our abilities, our means of recognizing a face in a crowd, of conversing about anything we experience or imagine, of forming thoughts and developing ideas, of instantly understanding words coming rapidly in conversation. How does it manage all this? Does it represent information in symbols or in the connectivity of a vast network?
PATHWAYS OF THE BRAIN builds a theory to answer such questions. Using a top-down modeling strategy, it charts relationships among words and other products of the brain's linguistic system to reveal properties of that system. Going beyond earlier linguistics, it sets three plausibility requirements for a valid neurocognitive theory: operational, developmental, and neurological: It must show how the linguistic system can operate for speaking and understanding, how it can be learned by children, and how it is implemented in neural structures. Unlike theories that leave linguistics isolated from science, it builds a bridge to biology.
Of interest to anthropologists, linguists, neurologists, neuroscientists, philosophers, psychologists, and any thoughtful person interested in language or the brain.
CONTENTS:
Acknowledgments
Preface
Chapter 1
The Window of the Mind
Chapter 2
Evidence of the First Two Kinds
Chapter 3
The Stratification of Language
Chapter 4
A Network of Relationships
Chapter 5
Components of Relational Networks
Chapter 6
Syntax
Chapter 7
Building Models
Chapter 8
Interacting Subsystems
Chapter 9
Meaning
Chapter 10
Building Connections
Chapter 11
Traveling the Pathways
Chapter 12
The Ever-Changing Network
Chapter 13
Sources of Linguistic Patterning
Chapter 14
Sequence Management
Chapter 15
Linguistic Illusions
Chapter 16
Introducing the Brain
Chapter 17
Neurons and Nections
Chapter 18
The Anatomy of Language
Epilog
Appendix
Notes
References
Index
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Maintained by Francis F. Steen, Communication Studies, University of California Los Angeles |