Where in the brain is nonliteral language

This review examines brain processing of nonliteral expressions that are familiar in form and meaning to the native speaker, such as idioms, proverbs, swearing, and speech formulas. The properties of stereotyped form and conventional meaning distinguish nonliteral utterances from novel expressions. An historical overview of preserved "automatic" speech in aphasia and impaired nonpropositional speech in other neurological diseases suggests that these kinds of language are stored and processed in the brain differently from newly created language. For production, lesion studies and other neurobehavioral observations associate nonliteral expressions with right hemisphere and subcortical structures. Comprehension studies implicate the right hemisphere. Although the entire brain is required for optimal performance, a right hemisphere—subcortical circuit may be important for processing of nonliteral expressions. A dual process model comprised of a holistic mode for nonliteral expressions and a compositional mode...

[1]  K. Bryan,et al.  Assessment of language disorders after right hemisphere damage. , 1988, The British journal of disorders of communication.

[2]  D. Tannen Talking Voices: Repetition, Dialogue, and Imagery in Conversational Discourse , 1989 .

[3]  D. Ploog Phonation, emotion, cognition, with reference to the brain mechanisms involved. , 1979, Ciba Foundation symposium.

[4]  William Labov,et al.  6. Problems in the Analysis of Idioms , 1980 .

[5]  Howard R. Pollio,et al.  Patterns of figurative language competence in adult speakers , 1979 .

[6]  C M Connine,et al.  Comprehension of idiomatic expressions: effects of predictability and literality. , 1994, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[7]  H W Gordon,et al.  Hemispheric asymmetries in the perception of musical chords. , 1970, Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior.

[8]  H. Whitaker,et al.  LINGUISTIC STRUCTURES IN STEREOTYPED APHASIC SPEECH , 1975 .

[9]  Wolfgang Mieder Investigations of proverbs, proverbial expressions, quotations and clichés : a bibliography of explanatory essays which appeared in Notes and Queries (1849-1983) , 1984 .

[10]  Peter Redgrave,et al.  Basal Ganglia , 2020, Encyclopedia of Autism Spectrum Disorders.

[11]  Daniel Kempler,et al.  Language Changes in Dementia of the Alzheimer Type , 1995 .

[12]  A. Luria Higher Cortical Functions in Man , 1980, Springer US.

[13]  Garrett E. Alexander Basal ganglia , 1998 .

[14]  C. Papagno,et al.  Comprehension of metaphors and idioms in patients with Alzheimer's disease: a longitudinal study. , 2001, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[15]  John L. Bradshaw,et al.  Human cerebral asymmetry , 1978, Trends in Neurosciences.

[16]  Leon Manelis,et al.  Recognition and Cued Recall of Idioms and Phrases. , 1973 .

[17]  R Wilkinson Pragmatics in neurogenic communication disorders , 2000 .

[18]  A. Antonini,et al.  The metabolic anatomy of Tourette's syndrome , 1997, Neurology.

[19]  J. Czopf Über die Rolle der nicht dominanten Hemisphäre in der Restitution der Sprache der Aphasischen , 1972, European Archives of Psychiatry and Neurological Sciences.

[20]  R. Haaxma,et al.  The mental status examination in neurology. F. A. Davis Company (1977), 182 pp., Price Fl. 24,25 , 1978 .

[21]  Walter Schneider,et al.  Controlled and Automatic Human Information Processing: 1. Detection, Search, and Attention. , 1977 .

[22]  S. Dursun,et al.  Neuroanatomy of coprolalia in Tourette syndrome using functional magnetic resonance imaging , 2004, Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry.

[23]  C. D. Qualls,et al.  Comprehension of idioms in adolescents with language-based learning disabilities compared to their typically developing peers. , 2004, Journal of communication disorders.

[24]  Charles J. Fillmore,et al.  Individual differences in language ability and language behavior , 1979 .

[25]  E. Drews,et al.  Qualitatively different organizational structures of lexical knowledge in the left and right hemisphere , 1987, Neuropsychologia.

[26]  P. Luelsdorff The Prague School of Structural and Functional Linguistics , 1994 .

[27]  Chapter Xvi,et al.  ISOLATION OF THE SPEECH AREA , 1974 .

[28]  C. Code Language, Aphasia and the Right Hemisphere , 1987 .

[29]  J. Peña-Casanova,et al.  Uncommonly long sequences of speech automatisms in a young woman with traumatic brain injury , 2002, Journal of Neurolinguistics.

[30]  D. Benson,et al.  Left‐to‐right transfer of language dominance , 1979, Neurology.

[31]  C. Burklund,et al.  Dominant Hemispherectomy: Preliminary Report on Neuropsychological Sequelae , 1966, Science.

[32]  Gerhard Blanken,et al.  Where do lexical speech automatisms come from? , 1997, Journal of Neurolinguistics.

[33]  Daniel Kempler,et al.  Effect of Speech Task on Intelligibility in Dysarthria: A Case Study of Parkinson's Disease , 2002, Brain and Language.

[34]  K. Balthasar Über das anatomische Substrat der generalisierten Tic-Krankheit (maladie des tics, Gilles de la Tourette): Entwicklungshemmung des corpus striatum , 2004, Archiv für Psychiatrie und Nervenkrankheiten.

[35]  Diana Van Lancker-Sidtis,et al.  Tracking the incidence of formulaic expressions in everyday speech: methods for classification and verification , 2004 .

[36]  D. Lancker Preserved formulaic expressions in a case of transcortical sensory aphasia compared to incidence in normal everyday speech , 2001 .

[37]  I. T. Draper THE ASSESSMENT OF APHASIA AND RELATED DISORDERS , 1973 .

[38]  Karen L. Klein,et al.  Preserved recognition of familiar personal names in global aphasia , 1990, Brain and Language.

[39]  K. Heilman,et al.  Disruption of automatic speech following a right basal ganglia lesion , 1993, Neurology.

[40]  S. Schweinberger,et al.  Famous personal names and the right hemisphere: the link keeps missing , 2002, Brain and Language.

[41]  A. Young,et al.  Intrusive automatic or nonpropositional inner speech following bilateral cerebral injury: A case report , 1989 .

[42]  S. Ariel,et al.  Introduction to Theoretical Linguistics. , 1968 .

[43]  P. Myers Right Hemisphere Damage: Disorders of Communication and Cognition , 1998 .

[44]  Floyd G. Lounsbury Linguistics and Psychology. , 1963 .

[45]  T. Shallice What ghost in the machine? , 1992, Nature.

[46]  Kevin Murphy,et al.  Speech production: Wernicke, Broca and beyond. , 2002, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[47]  D. Lancker,et al.  Comprehension of familiar phrases by left- but not by right-hemisphere damaged patients , 1987, Brain and Language.

[48]  K Bock,et al.  That’s the way the cookie bounces: Syntactic and semantic components of experimentally elicited idiom blendsß , 1997, Memory & cognition.

[49]  D. Palumbo,et al.  Hypothesis III. Tourette syndrome is only one of several causes of a developmental basal ganglia syndrome. , 1997, Archives of neurology.

[50]  D. V. van Lancker,et al.  Rags to Riches: Our Increasing Appreciation of Cognitive and Communicative Abilities of the Human Right Cerebral Hemisphere , 1997, Brain and Language.

[51]  Diana Van Lancker Sidtis,et al.  When novel sentences spoken or heard for the first time in the history of the universe are not enough: toward a dual-process model of language. , 2004, International journal of language & communication disorders.

[52]  Alison Wray,et al.  The functions of formulaic language: an integrated model , 2000 .

[53]  R. Hall,et al.  Mental Status: Examination , 2015 .

[54]  H. Gardner,et al.  Sensitivity To Musical Denotation And Connotation In Organic Patients , 1977, Cortex.

[55]  D. Vanlancker-Sidtis When only the right hemisphere is left: Studies in language and communication , 2004, Brain and Language.

[56]  Murray Grossman,et al.  Sentence comprehension in Parkinson's disease: The role of attention and memory , 1992, Brain and Language.

[57]  D. Levine,et al.  Language after bilateral cerebral infarctions , 1979, Neurology.

[58]  D. Lancker,et al.  Is your syntactic component really necessary , 2001 .

[59]  G Gainotti,et al.  The riddle of the right hemisphere's contribution to the recovery of language. , 1993, European journal of disorders of communication : the journal of the College of Speech and Language Therapists, London.

[60]  Costanza Papagno,et al.  Left But Not Right Temporal Involvement in Opaque Idiom Comprehension: A Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Study , 2004, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[61]  Carlo Semenza,et al.  The anatomical basis of proper name processing: A critical review. , 1995 .

[62]  Craig W. Linebaugh,et al.  Comprehension of Idiomatic Expressions by Right-Hemisphere-Damaged Adults , 1981 .

[63]  G. Schaltenbrand,et al.  The effects of stereotactic electrical stimulation in the depth of the brain. , 1965, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[64]  Y. Joanette,et al.  Right Hemisphere and Verbal Communication , 1989 .

[65]  B W Robinson,et al.  LIMBIC INFLUENCES ON HUMAN SPEECH * , 1976, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[66]  H. Head Aphasia and kindred disorders of speech , 1926 .

[67]  J E Bogen,et al.  The other side of the brain. II. An appositional mind. , 1969, Bulletin of the Los Angeles neurological societies.

[68]  J. Sidtis,et al.  The identification of affective-prosodic stimuli by left- and right-hemisphere-damaged subjects: all errors are not created equal. , 1992, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[69]  G. Blanken The functional basis of speech automatisms (recurring utterances) , 1991 .

[70]  M. Erb,et al.  Neural correlates of metaphor processing. , 2004, Brain research. Cognitive brain research.

[71]  A. Benton Aphasia, Alexia and Agraphia , 1980 .

[72]  C. Tompkins,et al.  The access and processing of familiar idioms by brain-damaged and normally aging adults. , 1992, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[73]  S. Catrin Blank,et al.  Neural systems involved in propositional and non-propositional speech , 2001, NeuroImage.

[74]  Kenneth R. Magee,et al.  Aphasiology and Other Aspects of Language , 1970 .

[75]  Claus-W. Wallesch,et al.  Basal ganglia participation in language pathology , 1982, Brain and Language.

[76]  C. Marsden The mysterious motor function of the basal ganglia , 1982, Neurology.

[77]  J. Locke A Theory of Neurolinguistic Development , 1997, Brain and Language.

[78]  D. Bolinger Syntactic Blends and Other Matters , 1961 .

[79]  J. Sinclair Collocation: a progress report , 1987 .

[80]  C. Mattei,et al.  Julian Jaynes. The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1978. , 1988 .

[81]  Houeto Jean-Luc [Parkinson's disease]. , 2022, La Revue du praticien.

[82]  M. Kinsbourne The minor cerebral hemisphere as a source of aphasic speech. , 1971, Archives of neurology.

[83]  A. W. Ellis,et al.  Is "Nonpropositional" Speech Preserved in Aphasia? , 1994, Brain and Language.

[84]  D. Bolinger,et al.  语言要略 = Aspects of Language , 1968 .

[85]  M. Nippold,et al.  Mental imagery and idiom comprehension: a comparison of school-age children and adults. , 2003, Journal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR.

[86]  Koch Sigmund Ed,et al.  Psychology: A Study of A Science , 1962 .

[87]  GrimmJohn C. Marshall,et al.  Nonpropositional Speech in Aphasia , 1993 .

[88]  S. Bookheimer,et al.  Activation of language cortex with automatic speech tasks , 2000, Neurology.

[89]  D. Kempler,et al.  PROVERB AND IDIOM COMPREHENSION IN ALZHEIMER DISEASE , 1988, Alzheimer disease and associated disorders.

[90]  L. Mansur,et al.  Sentence comprehensionin Parkinson’s disease , 2007, Dementia & neuropsychologia.

[91]  D. Lancker,et al.  Personally Familiar Proper Names Are Relatively Successfully Processed in the Human Right Hemisphere; or, the Missing Link , 2002, Brain and Language.

[92]  D. V. van Lancker,et al.  Disambiguation of ditropic sentences: acoustic and phonetic cues. , 1981, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[93]  W. Nauta Limbic innervation of the striatum. , 1982, Advances in neurology.

[94]  G E Gallahorn,et al.  The use of taboo words by psychiatric ward personnel. , 1971, Psychiatry.

[95]  J. Cummings,et al.  Frontal-subcortical circuits and human behavior. , 1993, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[96]  Simone Sprenger,et al.  Fixed expressions and the production of idioms , 2003 .

[97]  F. Plum,et al.  Words without Mind , 1999, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[98]  Karin Aijmer,et al.  Conversational Routines in English: Convention and Creativity , 1996 .

[99]  H. Gardner,et al.  The effects of right hemisphere damage on the pragmatic interpretation of conversational remarks , 1990, Brain and Language.

[100]  H. Gardner,et al.  The comprehension of metaphor in brain-damaged patients. , 1977, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[101]  Yves Joanette,et al.  Narrative Discourse in Neurologically Impaired and Normal Aging Adults , 1999 .

[102]  John J. Sidtis,et al.  On the nature of the cortical function underlying right hemisphere auditory perception , 1980, Neuropsychologia.

[103]  C. Code Can the Right Hemisphere Speak? , 1997, Brain and Language.

[104]  B. Dobkin,et al.  Phonagnosia: A Dissociation Between Familiar and Unfamiliar Voices , 1988, Cortex.

[105]  C. Fillmore,et al.  Regularity and Idiomaticity in Grammatical Constructions: The Case of Let Alone , 1988 .

[106]  B. Sandok Dementia. A clinical approach. , 1972, Minnesota medicine.

[107]  R. Shiffrin,et al.  Controlled and automatic human information processing: I , 1977 .

[108]  O. Suchowersky Gilles de la Tourette Syndrome – Review Article , 1994, Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences / Journal Canadien des Sciences Neurologiques.

[109]  Jennifer S. Burt,et al.  Against the Lexical Representation of Idioms , 1992 .

[110]  J. M. Cattell,et al.  The Psychological Corporation , 1923, Science.

[111]  T. Bever CEREBRAL ASYMMETRIES IN HUMANS ARE DUE TO THE DIFFERENTIATION OF TWO INCOMPATIBLE PROCESSES: HOLISTIC AND ANALYTIC , 1975, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[112]  J. V. Haxby,et al.  Spatial Pattern Analysis of Functional Brain Images Using Partial Least Squares , 1996, NeuroImage.

[113]  R. Gibbs Spilling the beans on understanding and memory for idioms in conversation , 1980, Memory & cognition.

[114]  G. Blanken Linguistic Disorders and Pathologies An International Handbook , 1993 .

[115]  Costanza Papagno,et al.  Idiom comprehension in aphasic patients , 2004, Brain and Language.

[116]  D. Lancker,et al.  Personal relevance and the human right hemisphere , 1991, Brain and Cognition.

[117]  Richard S. J. Frackowiak,et al.  The role of the right hemisphere in the interpretation of figurative aspects of language. A positron emission tomography activation study. , 1994, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[118]  L. Squire Memory systems of the brain: A brief history and current perspective , 2004, Neurobiology of Learning and Memory.

[119]  R. Kreuz,et al.  Two Cues for Verbal Irony: Hyperbole and the Ironic Tone of Voice , 1995 .

[120]  J. Jaynes The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind , 1976 .

[121]  Maryanne Martin,et al.  Hemispheric specialization for local and global processing , 1979, Neuropsychologia.

[122]  M. Lezak Neuropsychological assessment, 3rd ed. , 1995 .

[123]  岩田 一男,et al.  Essentials of English grammar , 1972 .

[124]  D. Lancker,et al.  Nonpropositional speech: Neurolinguistic studies , 1988 .

[125]  Cynthia M. Connine,et al.  On the compositional and noncompositional nature of idiomatic expressions , 1999 .

[126]  A. Damasio,et al.  A neural basis for lexical retrieval , 1996, Nature.

[127]  Diana Van Lancker Sidtis,et al.  Formulaic expressions in spontaneous speech of left‐ and right‐hemisphere‐damaged subjects , 2006 .

[128]  Howard Gardner,et al.  Pragmatic Aspects of Communication in Brain-Damaged Patients**We wish to acknowledge the support of the National Institute of Neurological and Communication Disorders and Stroke (M 11408), the Veterans Administration and Harvard Project Zero. , 1983 .

[129]  D. Van Lancker Meaning is first: A reply to the commentaries , 2001 .

[130]  P. Lieberman Some Effects of Semantic and Grammatical Context on the Production and Perception of Speech , 1963 .

[131]  C. Papagno,et al.  Dissociations of Language Functions in Aphasics with Speech Automatisms (Recurring Utterances) , 1990, Cortex.

[132]  D. Lancker,et al.  Language lateralization and grammars , 1973 .

[133]  P. Lieberman Human Language and Our Reptilian Brain: The Subcortical Bases of Speech, Syntax, and Thought , 2001, Perspectives in biology and medicine.

[134]  Discourse Conceptual Structure,et al.  Discourse and cognition : bridging the gap , 1998 .

[135]  J. Graham Beaumont,et al.  Hemisphere Function in the Human Brain , 1974 .

[136]  C. Papagno,et al.  Idiom comprehension in Alzheimer's disease: the role of the central executive. , 2003, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[137]  R. Gibbs,et al.  Speakers' assumptions about the lexical flexibility of idioms , 1989, Memory & cognition.

[138]  Timothy B. Jay Cursing in America , 1992 .

[139]  Kenneth M Heilman,et al.  Progressive affective aprosodia and prosoplegia , 2003, Neurology.

[140]  Elizabeth Bates,et al.  Idiom comprehension in children and adults with unilateral brain damage , 1999 .

[141]  D. Kerbel,et al.  A study of idiom comprehension in children with semantic-pragmatic difficulties. Part I: Task effects on the assessment of idiom comprehension in children. , 1998, International journal of language & communication disorders.

[142]  H. Simon,et al.  STM capacity for Chinese words and idioms: Chunking and acoustical loop hypotheses , 1985, Memory & cognition.

[143]  Catherine L. Harris,et al.  Psycholinguistic Studies of Entrenchment , 1997 .

[144]  Diana Van Lancker-Sidtis,et al.  Communicative deficits in agenesis of the corpus callosum: Nonliteral language and affective prosody , 2003, Brain and Language.

[145]  D. Bolinger Meaning and Memory , 1979 .

[146]  Howard Gardner,et al.  Sensitivity to conversational deviance in right-hemisphere-damaged patients , 1992, Brain and Language.

[147]  K M Eberhard,et al.  Dissociation between syntactic and semantic processing during idiom comprehension. , 2001, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[148]  P. Grunwell,et al.  A study of idiom comprehension in children with semantic-pragmatic difficulties. Part II: Between-groups results and discussion. , 1998, International journal of language & communication disorders.

[149]  J. Cummings,et al.  Expletives: neurolinguistic and neurobehavioral perspectives on swearing , 1999, Brain Research Reviews.

[150]  Alison Wray,et al.  Formulaic Language and the Lexicon: List of Figures and Tables , 2002 .

[151]  P. S. Achilles THE PSYCHOLOGICAL CORPORATION. , 1923, Science.

[152]  Nauta Wj,et al.  Limbic innervation of the striatum. , 1982 .

[153]  Yoshiharu Ono,et al.  Comprehension of Famous Personal and Geographical Names in Global Aphasic Subjects , 1998, Brain and Language.

[154]  Cristina Cacciari,et al.  Idioms: Processing, Structure, and Interpretation , 1993 .

[155]  M. Ball,et al.  Lexical and non-lexical speech automatisms in aphasic Cantonese speakers , 2004 .

[156]  C. Woolsey,et al.  Cerebral Localization and Organization , 1965 .

[157]  J. Jackson On the nature of the duality of the brain. , 1874 .

[158]  T Landis,et al.  Hemispheric control of speech expression in aphasia. A mouth asymmetry study. , 1985, Archives of neurology.

[159]  Jennifer A. Mangels,et al.  A Neostriatal Habit Learning System in Humans , 1996, Science.

[160]  N. Lassen,et al.  Cortical Activity in the Left and Right Hemispheres during Language-Related Brain Functions , 1980, Phonetica.

[161]  T. Valentine,et al.  Dissociations between the Processing of Proper and Common Names , 1997 .

[162]  J. Bogen,et al.  A case report of pathological rule-governed syllable intrusion , 1983, Brain and Language.

[163]  C. Singer COPROLALIA AND OTHER COPROPHENOMENA , 1997 .

[164]  H. Bortfeld Comprehending idioms cross-linguistically. , 2003, Experimental psychology.

[165]  P. Lieberman Human Language and Our Reptilian Brain , 2002 .

[166]  E Ryding,et al.  Changes of regional cerebral blood flow measured simultaneously in the right and left hemisphere during automatic speech and humming. , 1987, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[167]  A. Smith Speech and other functions after left (dominant) hemispherectomy. , 1966, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[168]  Tim Valentine,et al.  The cognitive psychology of proper names , 1996 .

[169]  N. Andreasen Reliability and validity of proverb interpretation to assess mental status. , 1977, Comprehensive psychiatry.

[170]  C. Code Neurolinguistic Analysis of Recurrent Utterance in Aphasia , 1982, Cortex.

[171]  Robert A. Bell,et al.  Idiomatic Communication and Interpersonal Solidarity in Friends’ Relational Cultures , 1992 .

[172]  Scott T. Grafton,et al.  PET activation studies comparing two speech tasks widely used in surgical mapping , 2003, Brain and Language.

[173]  D. R. Gorham,et al.  A PROVERBS TEST FOR CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL USE , 1956 .

[174]  Charles E. Osgood,et al.  Salience of the word as a unit in the perception of language , 1974 .

[175]  J. Phillips,et al.  Advance information and movement sequencing in Gilles de la Tourette's syndrome. , 1995, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[176]  Chris Code,et al.  The Characteristics Of Aphasia , 1989 .

[177]  Anne Cutler,et al.  The access and processing of idiomatic expressions , 1979 .

[178]  H A Simon,et al.  How Big Is a Chunk? , 1974, Science.

[179]  C. Burgess,et al.  Neurocognitive Mechanisms Underlying Metaphor Comprehension and Other Figurative Language , 1996 .

[180]  G Vallar,et al.  Understanding metaphors and idioms: A single-case neuropsychological study in a person with Down syndrome , 2001, Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society.

[181]  Arthur L. Benton,et al.  Differential behavioral effects in frontal lobe disease , 1968 .

[182]  B. Pakkenberg,et al.  Clinical features and long-term treatment with pimozide in 65 patients with Gilles de la Tourette's syndrome. , 1986, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[183]  C. Code First in, last out?: The evolution of aphasic lexical speech automatisms to agrammatism and the evolution of human communication , 2005 .

[184]  Completion phenomenon in transcortical sensory aphasia. , 1993, Behavioural neurology.

[185]  J. Sidtis,et al.  Dysprosodic speech following basal ganglia insult: Toward a conceptual framework for the study of the cerebral representation of prosody , 2006, Brain and Language.

[186]  H. Gardner,et al.  Appreciation of indirect requests by left- and right-brain-damaged patients: The effects of verbal context and conventionality of wording , 1989, Brain and Language.

[187]  Eran Zaidel,et al.  Auditory Vocabulary of the Right Hemisphere Following Brain Bisection or Hemidecortication , 1976, Cortex.

[188]  D. Lancker,et al.  Cerebral Laterality for Famous Proper Nouns: Visual Recognition by Normal Subjects , 2001, Brain and Language.

[189]  D Van Lancker The neurology of proverbs. , 1990, Behavioural neurology.