Neuroimaging study identifies differences in a key language structure before children start to learn to read.
Words which refer to 'big', abstract things are processed more quickly by the brain than 'smaller' words, a new study suggests.
Researchers discover the brain mechanisms which underlie discourse comprehension.
Researchers claim less gray matter in the brains of those with dyslexia is a consequence of poorer reading experiences and not the root cause of the disorder.
Researchers find brain regions that process syntax aren't limited to language alone.
A new neuroimaging study identifies areas of the brain responsible for language processing.
A new study identifies the neurological changes which occur as a result of aphasia following a stroke.
A new study reports we tend to be more easily distracted as we age.
According to a new study, the left hemisphere of the brain is not dominant in the perception of all languages.
A new study reports that in blind children, a region of the brain that normally involved in visual processing can be remodeled to process language.
Researchers discover learning complex auditory categories through procedural learning is impaired in dyslexia.
A new study sheds light on the evolutionary roots of language in the human brain.