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>Brain Region Linked to Language Processing Discovered

>Brain Region Linked to Language Processing Discovered
Laura Sanders 2026-01-22 16:00:00

The brain’s “little‌ brain” ⁤may hold big promise for people with language trouble.

Tucked into the base of the brain, the fist-sized cerebellum is most known ‌for​ it’s role in movement, posture and coordination.A new study maps the language ‍system in this⁢ out-of-the-way place. ‌These results, published January 22 in Neuron, uncover a spot in the cerebellum that shows‌ strong and selective activity for ‌language.

The new study ⁤is “excellent,” says neurologist and cerebellum researcher Jeremy Schmahmann of‌ Massachusetts⁤ General⁣ Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston.⁤ His work and that‌ of others have‌ shown that ‌the cerebellum contributes to ​language‍ and thinking‌ more generally.‍ The new research scrutinized the cerebellum in detail, “confirming and extending previous observations and contributing to our understanding” of the cerebellum’s activity,⁢ he says.

Neuroscientist⁢ Colton Casto combed⁢ through about ⁤15 years of brain scanning data collected by study coauthor Evelina ⁣Fedorenko, a cognitive neuroscientist‌ at MIT, and her‌ colleagues. Putting the data all together, the scans of 846 people showed brain activity in four spots in the‍ right side of ⁣the cerebellum as people ‍read or listened to a story.

Three of⁤ these spots were also active when people did othre things, such⁤ as working out a math problem, or listening to music or watching​ a movie without words.But one spot was more discerning, says⁤ Casto, of MIT and Harvard University. This region didn’t respond to nonverbal ⁢movies or math. It also ignored orchestral or⁣ jazz music,which,like language,relies on syntax and patterns and sound. Instead, this spot is attuned specifically‌ to​ words. “You have ​to ‌be⁣ reading or listening ​to language to fully recruit this ​region,” Casto says.

These ​four spots varied a bit from person ‌to person, the brain scans showed. Peaks of⁤ activity weren’t always in the⁤ same place. But⁣ generally, ⁢this cerebellum language system — all‍ in the right side of the structure — mirrors ⁣aspects⁣ of‌ the more well-known language systems in the left side of‍ the neocortex, ‍the wrinkly outer layer of the brain.

Fedorenko says that it is‌ indeed no longer surprising that ⁣ parts ⁢of ⁣the cerebellum care about language. “The⁣ real value of Colton’s work lies​ in establishing that one⁣ of ⁣these cerebellar‌ language areas ​is selective for language.”

The findings ⁢could nudge together two largely separate research fields,⁤ Fedorenko says. Cerebellum‍ research mostly⁣ focuses ​on motor functions. and⁤ language research doesn’t generally focus on the cerebellum. Fedorenko ​hopes this new evidence “will help change both of these positions.”

A few‍ caveats ‍remain, Casto says. For one, it’s not clear whether⁤ the ⁣three regions that seem less selective for words are ⁣truly not that selective. A region that seems ‍to respond​ to both‍ math ⁣and ‍language,for instance,might actually be two⁤ distinct,neighboring regions,each with specific ‍tastes. The⁤ functional MRI scans might not​ be able to distinguish ​those ‍smaller areas‌ clearly.

It’s also⁤ not clear​ why this ‍language system exists ⁢in the cerebellum at all. “It might ‍do somthing different ⁢for language than what the⁤ neocortex does,” Casto says. “We⁣ haven’t figured out what that​ is.”

One idea‌ that Casto is eager to explore is whether the ‌cerebellum helps to shape the growth ⁣of more well-known ‌language areas in the brain, perhaps early in ‍life as language skills are developing. The researchers are also⁤ curious about the​ cerebellum’s​ behavior in polyglots, people who speak multiple languages.

These language regions in the cerebellum ⁢might have health implications,‍ too. Language skills should be regularly ⁢checked after‌ a⁣ cerebellum injury,‍ for instance, Casto says.‌ Actually, Schmahmann⁢ and ‌his colleagues ⁢have described language deficits in people with cerebellum damage. And the cerebellum could turn out to be ⁣a useful brain ‍spot to target for people with aphasia, a⁤ communication disorder that can leave people unable to speak, read ⁢or write.

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