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Language module refers to a hypothesized structure in the human brain (anatomical module) or cognitive system (functional module) that some psycholinguists (for example, Steven Pinker) claim contains innate capacities for language. According to Jerry Fodor the sine qua non of modularity is information encapsulation; that is, the module is immune from information from other sources not directly associated with language processing (Fodor, 2005) There is currently ongoing debate about this in the field of cognitive science (psycholinguistics) and neuroscience (neurolinguistics).

What is a module?

The debate on the issue of modularity in language is underpinned, in part, by different understandings of this concept (Coltheart, 1999). There is, however, some consensus in the literature that a module is considered committed to processing specialized representations (domain-specificity) (Bryson, 2002; Bryson and Stein, 2001; Fodor, 1983) in an informationally encapsulated way (Flombaum, Santos & Hauser, 2002; Fodor, 1983). A distinction should be drawn between anatomical modularity, which proposes there's one 'area' in the brain that deals with this processing, and functional modularity that obviates anatomical modularity whilst maintaining information encapsulation in distributed parts of the brain (Calabretta, Ferdinando, Wagner, & Parisi, 2003).

No singular anatomical module

The available evidence points towards no one anatomical area solely devoted to processing language. The Wada test, where sodium amobarbital is used to anaesthetise one hemisphere, shows that the left-hemisphere appears to be crucial in language processing (Wada & Rasmussen, 1960). Yet, neuroimaging doesn't implicate any single area but rather identifies many different areas as being involved in different aspects of language processing (Martin, 2003; Binder & Price, 2001; Raichle, 1998) and not just in the left hemisphere (for example Robertson et al., 2000). Further, individual areas appear to subserve a number of different functions (Raichle, 1998; Grodinsky, 2006). Thus, the extent to which language processing occurs within an anatomical module is considered to be minimal. Nevertheless, as many have suggested (for example Pinker, 1997; von der Malsburg, 1995), modular processing can still exist even when implemented across the brain; that is, language processing could occur within a functional module.

No double dissociation - acquired or developmental

A common way to demonstrate modularity is to find a double dissociation. That is two groups: First, people for whom language is severely damaged and yet have normal cognitive abilities and, second, persons for whom normal cognitive abilities are grossly impaired and yet language remains intact (Dunn & Kirsner, 2003; Coltheart & Davies, 2003; Moscovitch & Umiltà, 1990). Whilst extensive lesions in the left hemisphere perisylvian area can render persons unable to produce or perceive language, (global aphasia; for example Goodglass & Kaplan, 1972), there's no known acquired case where language is completely intact in the face of severe non-linguistic deterioration (Levy, 1996). Thus, functional module status can't be granted to language processing based on this evidence.
   However, other evidence from developmental studies has been presented (most famously by Pinker, 1994, pp.37-43) as supporting a language module, namely the purported dissociation between Specific Language Impairment (SLI), where language is disrupted whilst other mental abilities are not (van der Lely, 2005), and Williams Syndrome (WS) where language is said to be spared despite severe mental deficits (Bellugi et al. 1988). More recent and empirically robust work has shown that these claims may be inaccurate, thus, considerably weakening support for dissociation. For example, work reviewed by Brock (2007) and Mervis and Beccera (2007) demonstrated that language abilities in WS are no more than would be predicted by non-linguistic abilities. Further, there's considerable debate concerning whether SLI is actually a language disorder or whether its aetiology is due to a more general cognitive (for example phonological) problem (for example Norbury, Bishop & Briscoe, 2001; Leonard, 1998; Bishop, 1994; Kail, 1994, cf. van der Lely, 2005). Thus, the evidence needed to complete the picture for modularity – intact language coupled with gross intellectual deterioration – isn't forthcoming. Consequently, developmental data offers little support for the notion that language processing occurs within a module.
   Thus, the evidence from double dissociations doesn't support modularity, although it should be noted that lack of dissociation isn't evidence against a module; this inference can't be logically made.

Lack of information encapsulation

Indeed, if language were a module it would be informationally encapsulated. Yet, there's evidence to suggest that this isn't the case. For instance, in the McGurk effect, watching lips say one phoneme whilst another is played creates the percept of a blended phoneme (McGurk & MacDonald, 1976; Carston. 1996). Further, Tanenhaus, Spivey-Knowlton, Eberhard and Sedivy (1995) demonstrated visual information mediating syntactic processing. In addition, the putative language module should process only that information relevant to language (for example, be domain-specific). Yet evidence suggests that areas purported to subserve language also mediate motor control (Heiser, Iacoboni, Maeda, Marcus & Mazziotta, 2003) and non-linguistic sound categorisation (Saygin, Dick, Wilson, Dronkers & Bates., 2003). Although it's possible that separate processes could be occurring but below the resolution of current imaging techniques, when all this evidence is taken together the case for information encapsulation is weakened.

The alternative

The alternative, as it's framed, is that language occurs within a more general cognitive system (Rumelhart & McClelland, 1986). The counterargument is that there appears to be something ‘special’ (Pinker & Jackendoff, 2005) about human language. This is usually supported by evidence such as all attempts to teach animals human languages to any great success have failed (Hauser et al. 2003) and that language can be selectively damaged (a single dissociation) (Pulvermüller, 2003) suggesting proprietary computation may be required. Instead of postulating 'pure' modularity, theorists have opted for a weaker version, domain-specificity implemented in functionally specialised neural circuits and computation (for example Jackendoff and Pinker’s (2005) words, we must investigate language “not as a monolith but as a combination of components, some special to language, others rooted in more general capacities” (p.223).
   The debate is ongoing.

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