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New MPI department: Language & Genetics

On October 1, 2010, the MPI for Psycholinguistics will be extended with a new department on Language & Genetics, headed by Simon E. Fisher of Oxford University. It will be the first research department in the world entirely devoted to understanding the relationship between language and genes.
New MPI department: Language & Genetics

Dr. Simon E. Fisher

September 21, 2010

Human children have an unparalleled capacity to acquire sophisticated speech and language skills. Despite the huge complexity of the task, most children learn their native languages almost effortlessly, and do not need formal teaching to achieve a rich linguistic repertoire. It has long been suspected that the answers to this enigma lie buried in our genetic makeup. This idea has gained considerable support from recent studies of children who suffer from inherited difficulties with language. The new MPI department on Language & Genetics will extend and move beyond this research, using dramatic advances in molecular technologies to discover how the human genome helps to build a language-ready brain.
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Bridge the gaps

'We aim to uncover the DNA variations which ultimately affect different facets of our communicative abilities, not only in children with language-related disorders but also in the general population, and even through to people with exceptional linguistic skills', says L&G director Simon Fisher. 'Our work attempts to bridge the gaps between genes, brains, speech and language, by integrating molecular findings with data from other levels of analysis, particularly cell biology and neuro-imaging. In addition, we hope to trace the evolutionary history and worldwide diversity of the key genes, which may shed new light on language origins.'
FOXP2

Unique endeavour

Such multidisciplinary research efforts will benefit from very strong interactions with the existing groups and experts at the MPI for Psycholinguistics. 'This is a unique endeavour', Fisher states. 'It will be the first research department entirely devoted to tracing the functional connections between genes and language.'
Prior to joining the MPI, Simon Fisher was a Royal Society Research Fellow at Oxford University. His earlier research includes investigations of the functions of FOXP2, the first gene to have been implicated in speech and language, which he and his colleagues discovered in 2001. Fisher is author of 70 journal articles, and his international awards include the Francis Crick Prize Lecture in 2008 and the Eric Kandel Young Neuroscientists Prize in 2009.
For more information on Simon Fisher, see link.
Last checked 2011-01-06 by Myrna Tinbergen
Max Planck Institute
About MPI

 

The Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics is an institute of the German Max Planck Society. Our mission is to undertake basic research into the psychological,social and biological foundations of language. The goal is to understand how our minds and brains process language, how language interacts with other aspects of mind, and how we can learn languages of quite different types.

The institute is situated on the campus of the Radboud University. We participate in the Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, and have particularly close ties to that institute's Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging. We also participate in the Centre for Language Studies. A joint graduate school, the IMPRS in Language Sciences, links the Donders Institute, the CLS and the MPI.

 

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