Identification of language-specific brain activity using magnetoencephalography.

The purpose of the present investigation was to explore the ability of magnetoencephalography (MEG) to identify brain areas involved in language comprehension. Event-related magnetic fields (ERFs) were recorded from 7 right-handed adults with no history of neurological disorder or learning disability as they engaged in an auditory and a visual word-recognition task. A face-recognition task served as control. During the later portion of the ERFs, activity sources from both language tasks tended to overlap in temporal and temporo-parietal cortices. There was a clear preponderance of such sources in the left compared to the right hemisphere in all participants. These findings demonstrate that MEG is a promising tool for identifying brain regions involved in the analysis of linguistic stimuli, in addition to the initial encoding of stimulus features.