The Language of Perception and the Brain

Abstract

The authors develop a new approach to the brain mechanisms of speech and perception based on the hypothesis that speech and perception are forms of one common structure - «language structure». In contrast with speech, which often appears the most developed and «genuine» form of language, perception seems only indirectly linked to the latter. For this reason, the article focuses on perception as a particular form of language, and it analyses recent theoretical and empirical research. Perception can be described as a «visual language» with its own alphabet (characters), morphology (parts of the «visual speech» - visual syllables, words and combinatory rules) and with its own visual syntax (punctuation marks).

General Information

Journal rubric: Psychophysiology

For citation: Izmailov C.A., Chernorizov A.M. The Language of Perception and the Brain . Psychology, 2005. Vol. 2, no. 4, pp. 22–52. (In Russ., аbstr. in Engl.)

Information About the Authors

Ch. A. Izmailov, Doctor of Psychology, Professor, Department of Psychophysiology, Faculty of Psychology, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia, e-mail: ch_izmailov@mail.ru

Aleksandr M. Chernorizov, Doctor of Psychology, Head of the Department of Psychophysiology, Faculty of Psychology, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia, e-mail: amchern53@mail.ru

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