Instructors

Prof. Liina Pylkkänen
liina.pylkkanen@nyu.edu
Office hour TBA

TA: Sarah Phillips
sarah.phillips@nyu.edu
Office hour TBA

Weekly Schedule:

MON 4:55-6:10 SILV 509
Recitation w SP. Arrive having watched the lectures and done the reading.

TUES 11:00am-12:15pm 10WP 104
In class active learning.

THU 11:00am-12:15pm 10WP 104
In-person only occasionally (check sched)

 

Course description

What are the brain bases of our ability to speak and understand language? Are some parts of the brain dedicated to language? What is it like to lose language? This course provides a state-of-the-art survey of the cognitive neuroscience of language, a rapidly developing multidisciplinary field in the intersection of Linguistics, Psycholinguistics and Neuroscience. Lectures cover all aspects of language processing in the healthy brain from early sensory perception to higher level semantic interpretation as well as a range of neurological and development language disorders, including aphasias, dyslexia and genetic language impairment. Functional neuroimaging techniques will be introduced.

Requirements

Attendance

Regular attendance in the synchronous sessions (Mon recitation and Tues discussion). Students arrive into the synchronous sessions having (i) watched the lecture-videos and (ii) done the reading, in that order. The lectures offer background for understanding the reading, which in most cases is an original research article, the author of which we meet in the Tues morning discussion session.

Class YouTube channel

Before the Mon-Tues in-person sessions, students watch the videos of that week’s topic on this YouTube channel:
Neural Bases of Language with Liina Pylkkanen – YouTube

Readings

There is no textbook. Instead, all readings are available on this website. You must be on the NYU network to access most journal articles.

In person activities: quizzes, discussion, presentations

Each in-person class start with a short quiz to assess learning. If it reveals weak points, we will spend 10-15 mins covering them. After that, the rest of the class will consist of activities designed to deepen what you learned from the online lectures and readings. Students will be on a rotation to present research ideas to a panel consisting of the other students. The instructor and TA will serve as “area experts” for the panel to consult.

Writing

After in-class presentations of research ideas, students will write up those ideas, taking into account the feedback given in class. Although the presentations may be done as a group, each student generates their own write-up. Our focus will be on learning to ask good questions. The panel members will also write up a brief summary of the strengths and weaknesses of the proposed project. The deadline for submitting the write-ups is Thu 11am .

A midterm and a final exam

Both exams will be a mixture of multiple choice and short answer questions. The final exam covers primarily, but not exclusively, post-midterm material. There will be no make-up exams. You receive a zero grade for an exam missed without a written, valid excuse acceptable to the instructor (e.g., medical reasons).

Grading

  • Writing (two project proposals): 20%
  • Participation (in class and recitation + panel write-ups): 15%
  • Quizzes: 15%
  • Midterm: 25%
  • Final: 25%

Your well-being

During the semester, you may experience challenges that will affect your ability to study and do your work. The earlier you let us know about your challenges, the better our chances to help you. Do not wait until the exam to communicate if you are struggling.

Anti-Racism Pledge

I will be brave enough to have uncomfortable conversations and take action against racism at NYU.

Schedule and course materials:

Default: Monday recitation w SP, Tues active learning w LP.  Exceptions to the default are marked in red.  rec = recitation; AL = active learning

DATES TOPIC VIDEOS (watch before READING) READ (before RECITATION)
2-Sep THU WELCOME none none
No rec (Labor Day)
7-Sep (AL)
INTRO and BRAIN BASICS SET 1 on YouTube

just slides

+ some brain fun: Interactive Brain

Small & Hickock: The Neurobiology of Language
13-Sep (rec)
14-Sep (AL)
METHODS I: Early aphasiology and the Classic Model SET 2 on YouTube

just slides

Wilson, S. & Fridriksson, J. Aphasia and aphasia recovery. In Gazzaniga et al (Eds.) The Cognitive Neurosciences Sixth Edition. MIT Press, Cambridge MA.
20-Sep (rec)
21-Sep (Lab visit 1)
23-Sep THU (Lab visit 2)
METHODS II: Neuroimaging and electrophysiology SET 3 on YouTube

just slides

Ahlfors, Seppo P., and Maria Mody. “Overview of MEG.” Organizational research methods 22.1 (2019): 95-115.
Beauchamp, M. S. (2002). Functional MRI for beginners. Nature Neuroscience, 5(5), 397-398.
28-Sep (rec TUES)
30-Sep (AL THU)
SPEECH SET 4 on YouTube

*just slides

Phillips, C. et al. (2000). Auditory Cortex Accesses Phonological Categories: An MEG Mismatch Study. J. Cogn. Neurosci. 12: 1038-1055.
4-Oct (rec)
5-Oct (AL)
READING SET 5 on YouTube

*just slides

Dehaene, S. (2013, May). Inside the letterbox: how literacy transforms the human brain. In Cerebrum: the Dana forum on brain science (Vol. 2013). Dana Foundation.
 

12-Oct (rec, TUES)
14-Oct (AL THU)

LEXICAL ACCESS SET 6 on YouTube

*just slides

Federmeier, K. D., Kutas, M., & Dickson, D. S. (2016). A common neural progression to meaning in about a third of a second. In Neurobiology of language (pp. 557-567). Academic Press.
18-Oct (MON) Midterm REVIEW w SP    
19-Oct (TUES) Midterm Q&A w LP (Q&A)    
21-Oct (THU 11-12:15) MIDTERM    
25-Oct (rec)
26-Oct (AL)
MORPHOLOGY SET 7 on YouTube

just slides

S&H Chapter 13: Morphology (Marantz)

Zweig, E., & Pylkkänen, L. (2009). A visual M170 effect of morphological complexity. Language and Cognitive Processes, 24(3), 412-439.

1-Nov (rec)
2-Nov (AL)
SYNTAX & SEMANTICS: CLASSICS SET 8 on YouTube

just slides

Kaan, E. & Swaab, T.Y. (2002). The brain circuitry of syntactic comprehension, Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 6(8), 350-356.
8-Nov (rec)
9-Nov (AL)
SYNTAX-SEMANTICS: BASIC COMPOSITION SET 9 on YouTube

just slides

Pylkkänen, L. (2019). The neural basis of combinatory syntax and semantics. Science, 366(6461), 62-66.
15-Nov (rec)
16-Nov (AL)
THE BILINGUAL BRAIN SET 10 on YouTube

just slides

[pdf coming] Chapters 2 & 3: Costa, A. (2020). The Bilingual Brain: And What It Tells Us about the Science of Language. Penguin UK.
22-Nov (rec)
23-Nov (AL)
SIGN LANGUAGE SET 11 on YouTube

just slides

[pdf coming] Emmorey, K. & MacSweeney, M. (2020)The Neurobiology of Sign Language Processing. In Gazzaniga MS, Mangun GR, Poeppel D, editors. The Cognitive Neurosciences VI. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press; 2020.
26-Nov THANKSGIVING    
29-Nov (rec) 30-Nov (AL) CAN LANGUAGE DISSOCIATE FROM OTHER ABILITIES? SLI AND WILLIAMS SYNDROME SET 12 on YouTube & Oliver Sacks movie

just slides

(1) Gopnik, M. (1997). Language deficits and genetic factors. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 1(1), 5-9.

(2) Lenhoff, H. M., Wang, P. P., Greenberg, F., & Bellugi, U. (1997). Williams Syndrome and the Brain. Scientific American, 68-73.

6-Dec (MON) Final REVIEW w SP    
9-Dec (THU) Final Q&A w LP (Q&A)    
14-Dec (TUES 11-12:15) FINAL EXAM