Gregory Hickok
Recent Progress Mapping the Neurobiology of Language
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Gregory Hickok
Gregory Hickok
Hickok received his Ph.D. from Brandeis University in 1991 and did post doctoral training at MIT and The Salk Institute for Biological studies. He has been on the faculty at the University of California Irvine since 1996 where he is currently Professor of Cognitive Sciences and Language Science. He was the founding Chair of the Society for the Neurobiology of Language, served as Editor-in-Chief of Psychonomic Bulletin & Review from 2014-2019, and is author of the The Myth of Mirror Neurons, published in 2014.
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Gregory Hickok
Recent Progress Mapping the Neurobiology of Language
Dual stream models of perception, including speech, have a long history. These models are often challenged by demonstrations of cross-stream interactions that have led some to challenge the usefulness of the dichotomy. I will argue that these challenges miss the fundamental claim of dual stream models, which are inherently perceptuo-centric, and fail to appreciate that from a different task-dependent perspective, the same architecture is not dual stream at all, but continuous. This is no contradiction and instead falls out directly from the task-dependent nature of these models. I will present new lesion data reinforcing this task dependence, emphasizing an asymmetry between expressive and receptive tasks, and I will show how this asymmetry itself falls out of a basic motor control architecture, the evolutionary precursor to speech and language networks. Recently, this approach has been applied to the neurobiology of syntax. I will give a brief history of the neurology of syntax and describe a new model built on a motor control architecture but preserving the representational core of modern linguistic theory.