
The Language Neuroscience Podcast ‘Wired for words: the neural architecture of language’ with Greg Hickok
Nov 25, 2025
In this engaging dialogue, Greg Hickok, a distinguished professor at UC Irvine and a leading voice in language neuroscience, delves into his new book. He shares insights on how language evolved through the modification of existing neural systems rather than invention. Hickok discusses the dual visual and language streams, the role of the dorsal stream in speech production, and introduces the Sylvian parietal temporal area as a critical hub for speech. He also highlights the bilateral nature of phonological processing, challenging conventional views on language lateralization.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
From Textbook Plan To Personal Monograph
- Greg Hickok originally planned a textbook but turned it into a monograph about the neural architecture of language.
- He wrote the book for his students while including detailed arguments for practicing scientists.
A Syntax Course That Changed Everything
- Greg described how a grad syntax course by Jane Grimshaw sparked his interest in language.
- That course shifted him from indifferent to deeply engaged in linguistics and psycholinguistics.
Dual Streams Are Cross-Modal Principles
- The visual 'what' and 'how' streams inspired an analogous split in speech processing.
- Auditory information supports both conceptual understanding and sensorimotor mapping for speech production.

