Huberman Lab - The Science of Learning & Speaking Languages | Dr. Eddie Chang
Episode Date: October 24, 2022My guest is Eddie Chang, MD, a neurosurgeon and professor of neurological surgery at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) and the co-director of the Center for Neural Engineering & Prost...heses. We discuss the brain mechanisms underlying speech, language learning and comprehension, communicating human emotion with words and hand gestures, bilingualism and language disorders, such as stuttering. Dr. Chang also explains his work developing and applying state-of-the-art technology to decode speech and using that information and artificial intelligence (AI) to successfully restore communication to patients who have suffered paralyzing injuries or “locked in syndrome.” We also discuss his work treating patients with epilepsy. Finally, we consider the future: how modern neuroscience is overturning textbook medical books, the impact of digital technology such as smartphones on language and the future of natural and computer-assisted human communication. For the full show notes, visit hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1: https://athleticgreens.com/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/hubermanlab Waking Up: https://wakingup.com/huberman Momentous: https://livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Dr. Eddie Chang, Speech & Language (00:03:16) Sponsor: LMNT (00:07:19) Neuroplasticity, Learning of Speech & Environmental Sounds (00:13:10) White Noise Machines, Infant Sleep & Sensitization (00:17:26) Mapping Speech & Language in the Brain (00:24:26) Emotion; Anxiety & Epilepsy (00:30:19) Epilepsy, Medications & Neurosurgery (00:33:01) Ketogenic Diet & Epilepsy (00:34:04) Sponsor: AG1 (00:36:10) Absence Seizures, Nocturnal Seizures & Other Seizure Types (00:41:08) Brain Areas for Speech & Language, Broca’s & Wernicke’s Areas, New Findings (00:53:23) Lateralization of Speech/Language & Handedness, Strokes (00:59:05) Bilingualism, Shared Language Circuits (01:01:18) Speech vs. Language, Signal Transduction from Ear to Brain (01:12:38) Shaping Breath: Larynx, Vocal Folds & Pharynx; Vocalizations (01:17:37) Mapping Language in the Brain (01:20:26) Plosives & Consonant Clusters; Learning Multiple Languages (01:25:07) Motor Patterns of Speech & Language (01:28:33) Reading & Writing; Dyslexia & Treatments (01:34:47) Evolution of Language (01:37:54) Stroke & Foreign Accent Syndrome (01:40:31) Auditory Memory, Long-Term Motor Memory (01:45:26) Paralysis, ALS, “Locked-In Syndrome” & Brain Computer Interface (BCI) (02:02:14) Neuralink, BCI, Superhuman Skills & Augmentation (02:10:21) Non-Verbal Communication, Facial Expressions, BCI & Avatars (02:17:35) Stutter, Anxiety & Treatment (02:22:55) Tools: Practices for Maintaining Calm Under Extreme Demands (02:31:10) Zero-Cost Support, YouTube Feedback, Spotify & Apple Reviews, Sponsors, Momentous Supplements, Huberman Lab Premium, Neural Network Newsletter, Social Media Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Disclaimer Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Huberman Lab podcast, where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine.
Today my guest is Dr. Eddie Chang. Dr. Eddie Chang is the chair of the neurosurgery department at the University of California at San Francisco.
Dr. Chang's clinical group focuses on the treatment of movement disorders, including epilepsy. He is also a world expert in the treatment of speech.
disorders and relieving paralysis that prevents speech and other forms of movement and communication.
Indeed, his laboratory is credited with discovering ways to allow people who have fully locked
in syndrome, that is, who cannot speak or move, to communicate through computers and AI devices
in order to be able to speak to others in their world and understand what others are saying
to them. It is a truly remarkable achievement that we discussed today, in addition to his discoveries
about critical periods, which are periods of time during one's life, when one can live.
learn things in particular languages with great ease
as opposed to later in life.
And we talk about the basis of things like bilingualism
and trilingualism.
We talk about how the brain controls movement
of the very muscles that allow for speech and language
and how those can be modified over time.
We also talk about stutter and we talk about a number
of aspects of speech and language that give insight
into not just how we create this incredible thing called speech
or how we understand speech and language,
but how the brain works more generally.
Dr. Chang is also one of the world leaders
in bioengineering, that is the creation of devices
that allow the brain to function at superphysiological levels
and that can allow people with various syndromes
and disorders to overcome their deficits.
So if you are somebody who is interested
in how the brain works normally,
how it breaks down and how it can be repaired,
and if you are interested in speech and language,
reading and comprehension of information of any kind,
today's episode ought to include some information
of deep interest to you.
Dr. Chang is indeed the top of his field,
in terms of understanding these issues
of how the brain encode speech and language
and create speech and language
and as I mentioned, movement disorders and epilepsy.
We even talk about things such as the ketogenic diet,
the future of companies like Neural Link,
which are interested in bioengineering
and augmenting the human brain and much more.
One thing that I would like to note
is that in addition to being a world-class neuroscience researcher
and world-class clinician neurosurgeon and chair of neurosurgery,
Dr. Eddie Chang has also been a close personal friend
of mind since we were nine years old.
We attended elementary school together,
and we actually had a science club
when we were nine years old,
focused on a very particular topic.
You'll have to listen into today's episode
to discover what that topic was
and what membership to that club required.
That aside, Dr. Chang is an absolute phenom
with respect to his scientific prowess,
that is both his research and his clinical abilities.
And he's one of these rare individuals
that whenever he opens his mouth, we learn.
Before he begin,
I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate
from my teaching and research roles at Stanford.
It is, however, part of my desire and effort
to bring zero cost to consumer information
about science and science-related tools
to the general public.
In keeping with that theme,
I'd like to thank the sponsors of today's podcast.
And now for my discussion with Dr. Eddie Chang.
Eddie, welcome. Hi, hi, Andrew.
Great to be here with you.
This has been a long time coming.
Just to come clean, we've known each other
since we were nine years old.
Yeah.
But then there was a long gap in which we didn't talk to one another.
I heard things about you and presumably you heard a thing too about me for better or for worse.
And then we reconnected years later when I was a PhD student and you were a medical student.
We literally ran into each other in the halls of University of California, San Francisco,
where you're now the chair of neurosurgery.
So it all comes full circle.
When you were at UCSF, you were working with Mike Mersenick.
And I know that name might not be familiar to a lot of people,
but he's sort of synonymous with neuroplasticity,
the ability of the brain and nervous system to change in response to experience.
So for our listeners,
I would just love for you to give a brief overview of what you were doing at that time
because I find that work so fascinating,
and it really points to some of the things that can promote
and maybe hinder our brain's ability to change.
Oh, wow, that's fantastic.
So we did bump into each other serendipitously back then.
And at the time, I was a medical student at UCSF studying with Mike Mersnick.
In particular, I was studying how the brain organizes when you have patterns of sound.
And in particular, we were studying the brain of rodents and trying to understand how different sound patterns
organize the frequency representation from low to middle to high frequency maps in the brains of baby rodents.
And one of the things that I was very interested in was trying to understand how the patterns of the natural environment, let's say the vocalizations of the environment that the rat pups were raised in or just the natural sounds that they hear, how that shapes the structure of the brain.
And one of the things we did was to try and experiment where we raised some of these rat pups in white noise, continuous white noise.
It was essentially masking all of those environmental sounds.
And what was the consequence of animals being raised in white noise environment?
Well, one of the things that we didn't expect, but we found which is quite striking, is that
there's this early period in brain development where we're very susceptible to the patterns
that we hear or see.
In neuroscience, we call this a critical period or a sensitive period.
And we have this for our eyes, but we also have it for our ears.
And one of the most striking examples of this is that any human can essentially grow up in a culture where they hear different speech sounds from one language to another.
And it's like after a couple of years, you lose sensitivity to sounds that are not part of your native language and you have high sensitivity for the languages of your native culture.
And that's pretty extraordinary that human brain has that flexibility, yet at the same time has that specialization.
for language. And so we were trying to think about how do we model this, for example, in rodents
who obviously don't speak, but we're just understanding how sounds and environmental sounds
modulate and organize auditory cortex. And one of the things that we found that was quite
striking was that if you basically mask environmental sounds from these rat pups,
the critical period, this sensitive period where it's open to plasticity,
it's open to change, it's open to reorganization,
that actually, that window can stay open much, much longer.
And in one way, it sounds like that's a good thing,
but on the other hand, it's also a retardation.
It's actually slowed the maturation of the auditory cortex.
It was ready to close when these repups were really young,
but by raising them in white noise,
we found out that you could keep it open for months beyond the time period
that it normally closes.
And so I think one of the things it taught me was that it's not just about the genetic programming
that specifies some of this sensitive period, but it's also a little bit about the nature
of the sounds that we hear that help keep that window for the critical period open and closed.
It's fascinating.
And I know it's difficult to make a direct leap from animal research to human research.
But if we could speculate a little bit, I can imagine.
that some people grow up in homes where there's a lot of shouting and a lot of inflection.
Maybe people are very verbose.
Maybe others grow up in a home where it's quieter and more peaceful.
Some people are going to grow up in cities.
I just came back from New York City.
It's like all night long there's honking and sirens and it's just nonstop.
And then I return here where it's quite quiet at night.
Can we imagine that the human brain is going to be shaped differently depending on whether
not when it grows up in one environment or another.
And would that impact their tendency to speak in a certain way as well as hear in a certain
way?
What do we know about that?
Well, I think that it's, from my perspective, it's really clear that those sounds that
we are exposed to from the very earliest time, even in utero in the womb, where the sound is
hearing the mother or father or friends while in the womb actually will influence how
these things organize. And so there's no question that the sounds that we hear are going to have
some influence. And those sounds are going to structure the way that those neural networks
actually lay down and will forever influence how you hear sounds. And speech and language is probably
one of the most profound examples of that. I get a lot of questions about the use of white noise
during sleep. In particular, people want to know whether or not using a white noise machine
or a program that makes the sound of waves, for instance, if it assists their infant in sleeping,
is it going to be bad for them because it's flooding the auditory system with a bunch of
essentially white noise or disorganized noise? Do we have an answer to that question?
Not yet. I think that what you're asking is a really important question because parents are
using white noise generators almost universally now.
And for good reasons, you know, it is hard to have kids up at night.
I've got three kids of my own and was very tempted to think about how to use some of these
tools to just sue them and get them to bed, especially when I was like so tired and exhausted.
But I think that there is a cost, you know, to think a little bit about, you know, we're not
exposed to continuous white noise naturally. There is a value to having really salient, structured
sounds that are part of our natural environment to actually have the brain develop normally.
So whether or not that has an impact while you're sleeping, it's not clear. I don't think that those
studies have been done. What was really clear was that if you raise these maybe rats in continuous
white noise, not super loud, but just enough to mask the environmental sounds, that that was enough
to keep, you know, the auditory cortex, the part of the brain that hears in this really
delayed state, which could essentially slow down the development and maturation of the brain.
And one probably assume that slowing the maturation of areas of the brain they're responsible
for hearing might, or underscore might impact one's ability to speak, right? Because isn't it the
case that if people can't hear, they actually have a harder time enunciating in a particular way.
Is that right? If I were to not be able to hear my own voice, would my speech patterns change?
Well, I think part of it is that over time, we develop sensitivity to the very specific
speech sounds in a given language. And the sensitivity improves as we hear more and more and more
of it. And then on the other hand, we lose sensitivity to other speech sounds. So the same, the
same time. But as part of that process, we also have a selectivity, again, a specialization even
for those sounds, even relative to noise, noisy backgrounds and things like that. I tend to think
about it like what is the signal to noise ratio. And so the brain has its own ways of trying to
increase that signal to noise ratio in order to make it more clear. Part of that is
how we hear and how it lays down a foundation for that signal-and-noise ratio.
And so you can imagine a child that's raised continuously in white noise
would be really deprived of those kind of sounds that are really necessary for it to develop properly.
So I think with regard to those tools for babies,
I think we should study.
We should try to understand this definitively.
I think what we saw rodents would tell us that there is potential,
things that we should be concerned about. But again, it's not really clear if you're just using
at night whether it has those effects.
I guess the critical question that a number of people are going to be asking is, did you
decide to use a white noise machine or not to help keep any of your three children asleep?
Well, I think the short answer is no. I mean, I obviously did a lot of work thinking and work on this
and thought about it carefully.
but there are other kinds of noise, or I wouldn't even call a noise, other sounds that you can use
that can be equally soothing to a baby. It's just that white noise has no structure,
and what it's doing is essentially masking out all of the natural sounds.
And I think the goal should really be about how do we replace that with other more natural sounds
that structure the brain in the way that we want to be more healthy?
Well, I know that after you finished your medical training, you went on to or specialized in neurosurgery.
And last I checked, you spend most of your days, either running your laboratory or you're in the clinic or running the department.
And your clinical work and your laboratory work involves often removing pieces of the skull of humans and going in and either removing things or stimulating neurons, treating various ailments of different kinds.
But your main focus these days, of course, is the neurobiology of speech and language.
And so for those that aren't familiar, could you please distinguish for us speech versus language
in terms of whether or not different brain areas control them?
And I know that there's a lot of interest in how speech and language and hearing all relate
to one another.
And then we'll talk a bit about, for instance, emotions and how facial expressions could play
into this or hand gestures, et cetera. But for the uninformed person and for me to be quite direct,
what are the brain areas that control speech and language? What are they really, and especially in
humans, how are they different? I mean, we have such sophisticated language compared to a number of
other species. What does all this landscape look like in there? Yeah. Well, that's a fascinating question.
And I'm going to just try to connect a couple of the dots here, which is that in that earlier work during medical school, I was doing a lot of what we call neurophysiology, putting electrodes into the auditory cortex and understanding how the brain responds to sounds.
And that's how we actually mapped out these things about the sensitivity to sensitive periods.
That experience with Mike Mersenek and thinking about how plasticity is regulating the brain, in particular about how sounds.
is represented by brain activity was something that, you know, was really formative for me.
And because I was a medical student, I was going back to my medical studies, it was that
in combination with seeing some awake brain surgeries that our department is really well known
for. One of my mentors, Mitch Berger, really pioneered these methods for taking care of patients
with brain tumor and be able to do these surgeries safely by,
keeping patients awake and by mapping out language. So they're talking and listening and you're essentially
in conversation with these patients while there's a portion of their skull removed and you are stimulating
or in some cases removing areas of their brain. Is that right? That's exactly right. And the only thing
off there is it's not essentially. It's it is just that. The only difference between the conversation that I
might have with my patient who's undergoing awake brain surgery is that I can't see their face and they can't see
my face. We actually have a sterile drape that actually separates the operating field and they're
looking and interacting with our neuropsychologists. But I can talk to them and they can hear my voice
and vice versa. And it's a really, really important way of how we can protect some of those areas
that are really critical for language at the same time, accomplish a mission of getting the seizures
under control or getting a brain tumor movement. And is that because occasionally you'll
encounter a brain area? Maybe you're stimulating or considering removing that brain.
area and suddenly the the patient will start stuttering or will have a hard time formulating a sentence is that is that
essentially what you're looking for you're looking for um regions in which it is okay or not okay to probe
exactly so the first thing that we do is that we use a small electrical stimulator to probe different
parts of the areas that we think might be related and important for language or talking or even
movements of your arm and leg that's what we call brain mapping and
we use a small electrical current that's delivered through a probe that we can just put at each
spot. And the areas that we're really interested in are, of course, the areas that are right around
the part that is pathological, the part that's injured or the part that has a brain tumor that we want to
remove. So we can apply that probe in transiently, meaning temporarily activated. So if you're
stimulating the part of the brain that controls the hand, the hand will move. It will jerk. Sometimes a fist will be made.
something like that. Other times, while someone is counting or just saying the days of the week,
you can stimulate in a different area that stops their speech altogether. That's what we call
speech arrest. Or if someone is looking at pictures and they're describing the pictures and you
stimulate in a particular area, they stop speaking or the words start coming out slurred or they can't
remember the name of the object that they're seeing in the picture, these are all things that we're
really carefully while we apply that focal stimulation.
That's what we call brain mapping.
What are some of the more surprising,
or maybe even if you want to offer one of the more outrageous examples
of things that people have suddenly done
or failed to be able to do as a consequence of this brain mapping?
Well, I think the thing to me that has been the most striking
is that some of these areas you stimulate
and altogether you can shut down someone's talking.
So a person says, I wanted to say it, but I couldn't get the words out.
And even though I've seen this thousands of times now, it's still exciting every time that I see it.
Because it's exciting because you're seeing the brain.
It's a physical organ.
It's part of the body.
Outside of the veins on top of it doesn't look like a machine.
but when you do something like that and you vocally change the way it works and you see that
because a person can't talk anymore and they say, I know what I want to say, but I couldn't get
the words out.
You're confronted with this idea that that organ is the basis of speech and language.
And way beyond that, obviously, you know, for all the other functions that we have for
thinking and feeling our emotions, everything.
So that to me is a constant reminder of, you know, this really special thing that the brain does was compute.
So many of the things that we do, and in particular in the area around speech and language, generating words,
something that is really unique to our species, is just extraordinary to see.
Again, even though I've seen it thousands of times, it's just having that connection.
because it doesn't look like machine, but it is doing something that is quite complicated,
precise, and remarkable. Do you ever see emotional responses from stimulation in particular areas?
And do you ever hear or see emotional responses that are associated with particular types of speech?
Because for, I would, for instance, curse words are known to, people with Tourette's often will curse.
Not always, but sometimes they'll have ticks or other things.
But what I learned from a colleague of ours is that curse words have a certain structure to them.
There's usually a heavy or kind of a sharp consonant up front, right, that allows people,
at least as it was described to me, to have some sort of emotional release.
It's not a word like murmur, which has a kind of a soft entry.
Here I'm not using the technical language.
And you pick your favorite curse word out there, folks.
I'm not going to shout out any now or say any now.
But that certain words have a structure to them that because,
of the motor patterns that are involved in saying that word, you could imagine has an emotional
response unto itself. So when stimulating or when blocking these different brain areas, do you ever
see people get angry or sad or happy or more relaxed? Oh, well, definitely I've seen cases where you can
invoke anxiety, stress. And I think that there are also areas that there are also areas that
that you can stimulate and you can also evoke the opposite of that, sort of like a calm state.
I think that brain area is slightly hyperactive in you, or at least more than me.
And all the years I've known you, you've always been at least externally a very calm person.
I mean, I always find it amusing that you work on speech and language and you have a very calming voice.
Right.
And I'm being really serious.
I think that there's a huge variation in terms of how people speak and how the accent words.
Absolutely. Yeah. So there are areas, for example, the orbital frontal cortex that we showed, that if you stimulate there, the orbital frontal cortex is a part of the brain that's above the eyes. That's why they call it orbital frontal, meaning it's above the eye or the orbit. And in the frontal lobe, and it's this area right in here. It has really complex functions. It's really important for learning and memory. But one of the things that we observed is when you stimulate there, people tended to have.
a reduction in their stress. And it was very much related to their state of being, meaning that
if someone was already kind of feeling normal, you stimulate there, it didn't do much. But if someone
was in a very anxious state, it actually relieved that. And then we've seen the corollary of that,
which is true too, which is that there are other areas like the migdala or parts of the
insula, that if you stimulate, you can cause an acute
temporary anxiety, a nervous feeling.
Or if you simulate insula, people can have an acute feeling of disgust.
So, you know, the brain has different functions and these different nodes that help process
the way we feel.
Certainly, I think that to some degree, neuropsychiatric conditions reflect an imbalance of
electrical activities in these areas.
One of the things that was something I will never forget was taking care of a young woman with uncontrolled seizures.
We call that epilepsy.
It's a medical condition where someone has uncontrolled electrical activity in the brain.
Sometimes you can see that as convulsions where people are shaking and lose consciousness.
There are other kind of seizures that people can have where they don't lose consciousness,
but they can have experiences that just come out of nowhere.
and it's just as a result of electrical activity coming from the brain.
And about six years ago, I took care of a young woman who was diagnosed
psychiatrically with anxiety disorder for several years.
It turns out that it wasn't really an anxiety disorder.
It was actually that she had underlying seizures and epilepsy activating a part of her brain
that evokes anxious feelings.
How was that discovered?
Because I know a lot of people out there have anxiety.
I mean, in the absence of a brain scan,
how would, or why would one suspect that maybe they have a tumor
or some other condition that was causing those neurons to become hyperactive?
Yeah, that's really important because so many people have anxiety
and the vast, vast majority are not having that because they're having seizures in the brain.
I think one of the ways that this was diagnosed was that,
the nature of when she was having these panic attacks was not triggered by anything.
They would just happen spontaneously.
And that's what can happen with seizures sometimes.
They just come out of nowhere.
We don't fully understand what can trigger them.
But they weren't things that were typically anxiety provoking.
This is something that just happened all of a sudden.
And because you brought it up, this is not something that you can see on an MRI.
We could not see and look at the structure of her brain with an MRI
that she was having seizures.
The only way that we could actually prove this
was actually putting electrodes into her brain
and proving that these attacks that she was having
were localized to a part called the amygdala.
It's a medial part of the temporal lobe, which is here,
and associating the electrical activity
that we were seeing on those electrodes with the symptoms that she had.
And she ultimately needed a kind of surgery where she was awake in order to remove this
safely.
Speaking of epilepsy, a number of people out there have epilepsy or know people who do,
are the drugs for epilepsy satisfactory?
You know, I think about things like Depakot and adjusting the excitation and inhibition
of the brain.
I mean, are there good drugs for epilepsy?
We know there are not great drugs for a lot of other conditions.
And how often does one need neurosurgery in order to treat epilepsy or can be treated most often just using pharmacology?
Yeah, great question.
Well, a lot of people have seizures that can be completely controlled by their medications a lot.
But there's about one third of people who have epilepsy, which we define as anyone who's had three or more.
more seizures, that about a third of them actually don't have control with all of the modern
medications that we have nowadays.
And some of the data suggests that if you have two or three medications, it actually
doesn't matter necessarily which of the anti-seizure medications it is, but there is data suggests
if you've just tried two or three, the fourth, fifth, sixth, and beyond,
is not likely to help control it.
So we are in a situation, unfortunately,
where a lot of the medications are great for some people,
but for another subset, they can't control it,
and it comes from a particular part of the brain.
Now, fortunately, in that subset,
there's another part of that group
that can benefit from a surgery
that actually either removes that part of the brain.
And nowadays, we'll use stimulators now to sometimes put electrical
stimulation in that part of the brain to help reduce the seizures. And you said a third of people with
epilepsy might need neurosurgery. Well, what I mean by that is like they continue to have seizures
that are not controlled by all medications. And there's going to be another subset of those that may
benefit from a surgery. It's probably not that whole third. It's a subset of that. It's just to say that
epilepsy can be really hard to get fixed. And for people where the seizures come from, one spot,
or, you know, an area, then surgery can do great.
If it comes from multiple areas or if it comes from the whole brain, then we have to think
about other methods to control it.
Fortunately nowadays, there's actually other ways.
Surgery now to us doesn't just mean we're moving part of the brain.
Half of what we do now is use stimulators that modulate the state of the brain that can help
reduce the seizures.
I've heard before that the ketogenic diet was originally.
originally formulated in order to treat epilepsy, in particular in kids. Is that true? And why would
being in a ketogenic state with low blood glucose reduce seizures? That's a great question.
And to be honest, I don't know actually if it was originally designed to treat seizures. But I can't
tell you for sure that for some people, just like with some medications, it can be a life-changing
thing. It can completely change the way.
that the brain works and it's not something that's for everybody but for some people there's no
question and it has some very beneficial effects i think it's to be determined still like why why and how
that works i've heard similar things about the ketogenic diet for people with alzheimer's dementia
that um there's nothing particularly relevant about ketosis to alzheimer's per se but because
alzheimer's changes the way that neurons metabolize energy
that shifting to an alternate fuel source can sometimes make people feel better.
And so a number of people are now trying it.
But it's not as if blood glucose and having carbohydrates is causing Alzheimer's.
And people get confused often that just because something can help doesn't mean that the opposite is harming somebody.
So I find this really interesting.
Sometime I'll check back with you about what's happening in terms of ketogenic diets and epilepsy.
But you said that in some cases it can help.
as that observation been made both for children and for adults?
Because I thought that originally the ketogenic diet for epilepsy
was really for pediatric epilepsy.
Yeah, that's right.
So a lot of its focus has really been on kids with epilepsy.
But certainly it's a safe thing to try.
So a lot of adults, you know, will try it as well.
Interesting.
I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors,
Athletic Greens.
Athletic Greens now called AG1 is a vitamin mineral probiotic drink.
that covers all of your foundational nutritional needs.
I've been taking athletic greens since 2012,
so I'm delighted that they're sponsoring the podcast.
The reason I started taking athletic greens
and the reason I still take athletic greens once or usually twice a day
is that it gets to be the probiotics that I need for gut health.
Our gut is very important.
It's populated by gut microbiota
that communicate with the brain, the immune system,
and basically all the biological systems of our body
to strongly impact our immediate and long-term health.
and those probiotics and athletic greens are optimal and vital for microbiotic health.
In addition, athletic greens contains a number of adaptogens, vitamins, and minerals that make sure that all of my foundational nutritional needs are met.
And it tastes great.
If you'd like to try athletic greens, you can go to athletic greens.com slash Huberman, and they'll give you five free travel packs that make it really easy to mix up athletic greens while you're on the road in the car, on the plane, et cetera.
and they'll give you a year supply of vitamin D3K2.
Again, that's athletic greens.com slash Huberman
to get the five free travel packs
and the year's supply of vitamin D3K2.
I'm curious about epilepsy for another reason.
I was taught that epilepsy is an imbalance in the excitation
and inhibition in the brain.
So you think about these electrical storms
that give people either grand mal, you know, shaking and kind of convulsions.
Right.
But years ago, I was reading a book, a wonderful book actually.
with Einstein in love by Dennis Overby
is about Einstein and his more, I guess, his personal life.
But people who knew him claim that he would sometimes walk along
and then every once in a while would just stop
and kind of stare off into space
for anywhere from a minute to three or five minutes.
And it was speculated that he had absence seizures.
What is an absence seizure?
And the reason I ask is I occasionally
we'll be walking along and I'll be thinking about something
and I'll stop. But in my mind, I think I'm thinking during that time. But I realized that if I were
to see myself from the outside, it might appear that I was just kind of absent. What is an absence
seizure? Because it's so strikingly different in its description from, say, a grand mal convulsive seizure.
Sure. Well, like I mentioned before, depending on how the seizure activity spreads in the brain
or how it actually propagates,
if it stays in one particular spot
and doesn't spread to the entire brain,
it can have really different manifestation.
It can represent really differently.
So Abson seizure is just one category
of different kind of seizures where you can lose consciousness, basically.
And what I mean by that is that you're not fully aware
of what's going on in the environment.
So you're sort of taken offline temporarily
from consciousness.
but you could still be, for example, standing.
And to people who are not paying attention,
they may not even be aware that that's happening.
What are some other types of seizures?
Well, you know, I think some of the other kinds are,
the classic ones are temporal lobe seizures.
So these are ones that come from the medial structures
like the migulae and hippocampus.
Oftentimes people, when they have seizures coming from that,
they may taste something very unusual, like a metallic taste or smell, something like the smell of burning toast, something like that.
There are some people with temporal lobe seizures will have deja vu.
They will have that experience that you've been somewhere before, but that's just a precursor to the seizure.
And it just highlights that when people have seizures coming from these areas, they sometimes hijack what that part of the brain
is really for. So the mechalah and hippocampus, for example, are really important for learning and
memory. It's not surprising that when people have seizures there, that it can invoke a feeling of
deja vu or that it can invoke a feeling of anxiety. And in the areas that are right next to it,
for example, these areas are really important for processing smell. So these areas are right
next to each other. So you can have these kind of complex set of symptoms, the weird taste,
the smell of toast, and then a feeling with deja vu. That's classic for temporal lobe seizure.
And it's because those parts of the brain of the process of those functions are right next to each other.
I'm told that I've had nocturnal seizures and I've woken up sometimes from sleep,
having felt as if I was having a convulsion, the sort of sense of buzzing in the back of the head.
This happened to me two or three times in college. My girlfriend.
and well, I woke up and my girlfriend was very distraught,
like you were having a seizure.
I was having full convulsion in my sleep.
Is that correct?
Are there, is there such a thing as nocturnal seizures?
What do they reflect?
They eventually stopped happening.
And I couldn't tether them to any kind of life event.
I wasn't doing any kind of combat sport or anything at the time.
I wasn't drinking alcohol much.
It's never really been my thing.
What are nocturnal seizures about?
Oh, well.
And do I need brain surgery?
Nocturnal seizures are just another form.
Like, again, epilepsy and seizures can have so many different forms.
And not just like where in the brain, but also when they happen.
And there are some people who, for whatever reason, it's very time to the circadian rhythm.
There's actually not just happening in night, but a certain period in night when people are in a certain stage of sleep, that the brain is in a state.
that it's vulnerable to having a seizure.
And so that's basically just one form of that.
Again, it's not just about where it's coming from,
but also when it's happening,
how that's timed with other things that are happening with the body.
Interesting.
Well, it eventually stopped happening,
so I stopped worrying about it,
but I haven't had seizures since.
Returning to speech and language.
When I was getting weaned in neuroscience,
I learned that we have an area of the brain for producing speech and we have an area of the brain for comprehending speech.
What's the story there? Is it still true that we have a Broca's and a Vernankees area?
Those are names of neurologists, presumably, or neurosurgeons that discover these different brain areas.
Maybe you could familiarize us with some of the sort of textbook version of how speech and language are organized in the brain.
Maybe share with us a little bit of the lesion studies that led to that understanding.
And then I would love to hear a bit about what your laboratory is discovering about how things are actually organized.
Because from some discussions you and I have had over the last year or so, it seems like, well, let's just be blunt.
It seems that much of what we know from the textbooks could be wrong.
Well, I love that question because for me, it's very central to the research we do.
And it's where the intersection between what we do in the laboratory and our research,
with what I see in patients.
And one of the things that fascinated me early on in my medical training was in doing some
of these brain mapping or watching them with my mentor or taking care of patients and had,
you know, brain tumors in a certain part of the brain was that a lot of times what I was seeing
a patient did not correlate with what I was taught in medical school.
And, you know, some people will think, well, this might be an exception.
but after you see it for a couple of times and if you're kind of interested in this problem
it poses a problem you know it poses a serious challenge to what you've learned and how you think
about how these things operate and that actually got me really interested in trying to figure this out
because earlier we talked about just this extraordinary thing that the brain is doing to create words
and sentences and that's the process by which
I'm getting ideas out from my mind into yours.
It's an incredible thing, right?
It's the basis of communication,
high information communication between two individuals
that's really unique to humans.
So in historical times,
how this works has been very controversial
from day one of neuroscience.
A long time ago, people thought,
bumps on your head corresponded to the different faculties of the mind. So, for example, if you had a
bump here, it might be corresponding to intelligence or another one over here, you know, to vision
and these kind of things. That's what we nowadays call phrenology. And that was kind of the
starting point. A lot of that has been, of course, debunked. But when you see those little statues
of different brain partitions on someone's head, that's essentially. That's essentially,
how people were thinking about how the brain worked back then a couple hundred years ago.
Modern neuroscience began when actually was very much related to the discovery of language.
So modern neuroscience, meaning moving beyond this idea that the bumps on the scalp corresponded
to the faculties of the mind.
But there were things that actually were in the brain themselves,
and they weren't corresponding to things that you could see superficially, like on the scale,
out or externally, that it was something about the brain itself.
I mean, it seems so obvious now, but back then, this was the big academic, you know, debate.
And the first observation that I think really was really impactful in the area of language
was an observation by a neurosurgeon, a French neurosurgeon named Pierre Broca.
And what he observed was that in a patient, not that he did surgery, but that he had seen
and taking care of, the person couldn't talk.
And in particular, they called this individual tan,
because the only words that he could produce was tan, tan.
For the most part, he could generally understand
the kind of things that people were asking about,
but the only thing that he could utter from his mouth
were these words, tan, tan.
And what eventually had happened was this individual passed away,
And the way that neuroscience was done back then was basically to wait until that happened
and then to remove the brain and to see what part of the brain was affected in this patient
that they called tan.
And what Broca found was that there was a part in the left frontal lobe.
So the frontal lobe is this area like I described earlier, which is behind our forehead,
up here.
And in the back of that frontal lobe,
he claimed that this was the seat of articulation in the brain.
He literally used something like that in France,
the seat of articulation,
meaning that this is the part of the brain
that is responsible for us to generate words.
About 50 years later,
the story becomes more complicated
with a German neurologist named Karl Wernicke.
And what Wernicke described was a different,
set of symptoms in patients that he observed a different phenomenon where people could produce
words but a lot of the word and they were fluent in the sense that they had like um they sound like
they could be real words but from a different language for example and some of us call that like
word salad or jargon it's essentially they were essentially making up words but it was not
It was just the way that the words came out.
But in addition to that, he observed that these people also could not understand what was being said to them.
So we could be having conversation and I'd be asking you, am I a woman?
And you might nod your head, you know, just because you're not processing the question, you know.
And so here are two observations.
One is that the frontal lobe is important for articulating speech, creating the words and expressing them fluently,
and then a different part of the brain called the left temporal lobe, which is this area right above my ear.
That is an area that I think was claimed to be really important for understanding.
So the two major functions in language to speak and to understand were kind of pinned down to that.
we've had that basic idea in the textbooks for, you know, over 200 years.
Certainly what I was taught.
Is that right?
Oh, every, yeah.
And certainly what we still, we still teach undergraduates, graduate students, and medical students that.
Well, that's what I learned, too, in medical school.
And what I saw in reality when I started taking care of patients was that it's not so simple.
In fact, part of it is fundamentally wrong.
So just in a nutshell, nowadays,
after looking at this very carefully over hundreds of patients,
we've shown that surgeries, for example, in the posterior part of the frontal lobe,
a lot of times people have no problem talking at all at all whatsoever after those kind of surgeries.
And that it's a different part of the brain, we call the precentral gyrus.
The precentral gyrus is a part of the brain that is intimately associated with the motor cortex.
the motor cortex is the part of the brain that has a map of your entire body.
So it has a part that corresponds to your feet, has a part that corresponds to your hands.
But then there's another part that comes out more laterally on the side of the brain
that corresponds to your lips, your jaw, your larynx.
And we have seen that when patients have surgeries or injuries to that part of the brain,
it actually can really interrupt language.
So it's not as simple as just moving the muscles of the vocal tract,
but it's also important for formulating and expressing words.
So that's Broca's area that I think the field now recognizes,
not just because of our work,
but many other people that have studied this in stroke and beyond,
is that the idea that is the basis of speaking in Broca's area
is fundamentally wrong right now.
And we have to figure out how to correct the textbooks
that we kind of understand that so that we can continue
to make progress.
Now, in terms of the other major area that we call Wernicke's area in the posterior temporal lobe,
that has held, I think, quite legitimately for some time.
So that is an area that you have to be super careful when you do surgery there.
That's an area where if you have a mistake there and you cause a stroke or you remove too much of the tumor there,
You go too far beyond it, then the person can be really, really hurt.
Like they'll have a condition that we call aphasia, where they may not be able to understand words.
They may not be able to remember the word that they're trying to say.
They know what they're trying to say, but they can't remember the precise word that goes with the object that they're trying to think of.
They may even produce words that I described before are like word salad or very jargoning.
So, you know, they might say something like Tamir and I.
That's not a real word.
But it sounds like it could be, you know, and that's just because that part of the brain has some role, not just in understanding what we hear,
but also actually has a really important role in sending the commands to different parts of the brain to control what we say.
Not long ago, you and me and my good friend Rick Rubin were having a conversation.
conversation about medicine and science. And Rick asked the question, what percentage of what you
learned in graduate and or medical school do you think is correct? And you had a very interesting
answer. Would you share it with us? I don't know. I don't remember the exact, but I would say that
with regard to the brain in particular,
I would say about 50% gets it right and accurate and it's helpful.
But another 50% is just the approximation and oversimplification of what's going on.
The example that we talked about language is just an example of that.
It's just there are things that make it easier to learn and easier to teach and easier to even think about.
And that's probably why we continue teaching in the way that we do.
But I think as time goes on, the complexity of reality of how the brain works is, well, first of all, we're still trying to figure it out.
And second of all, it is complex.
And it's still incomplete story.
That's early days.
And we'll get into some of the technical advances that are allowing some correction of the errors that the field has made.
and look, no disrespect to the brain explorers that came before us,
and the ones that come after us will correct us, right?
That's the way the game is played.
But what I'm hearing is that there are certain truths that people accept,
and then there's about half of the information
that is still open for debate and maybe even for complete revision.
One thing that I learned about language and the neural circuits underlying language
is that it's heavily lateralized,
that these structures, Brocas and Vernankees and other structures,
and the brain responsible for speech
and comprehension of speech
sit mainly on one side of the brain,
but they do not have a mirror representation
or another equivalent area on the opposite side of the brain.
And for those that haven't poked around in a lot of brains,
certainly you, Eddie, have done far more of that than I have,
but I've done my fair share in non-human species
and a little bit in humans.
Almost every structure, almost every structure
has a matching structure on the other side of the brain.
So when we say the hippocampus,
we really mean two hippocampi,
one on each side of the brain.
But language I was taught is heavily lateralized.
That is that there's only one.
So that raises two questions.
One is that true.
And if it is true,
then what is the equivalent real estate
on the opposite side of the brain doing?
Yeah.
If it's not doing the same function
that the one on the, say, the left side is performing.
Well, that's one of those things that is, again,
like mostly true.
not 100%. And what I mean by that is that it's complicated. So for people who are right-handed,
99% of the time, the language part of the brain is on the left side.
And what is the equivalent brain area on the right side doing if it's not doing language?
Well, you know, the thing that's incredible is if you look at the right side and you look at it
very carefully, either under an MRI or you actually look at the brain under slides at a microscope,
it looks very, very similar.
It's not identical, but it looks very, very similar.
All the gyri, which are the bumps on the brain that have the different contours and the valleys that we call solci.
Those all look basically the same, like there is a mirror anatomy on the left and right side.
And so it's not been so clear what's so special, actually, about the left side to house language.
But what we do know, and this is what we use all the time in.
assessing and figuring out, you know, this before surgery is if you're right-handed, 99% of the time
the language is going to be on the left side of the brain. Is handed in this genetic in any way?
I mean, when I grew up, a pen or a pencil was, or crayon was placed into my hand, presumably,
or I started using my father was left-handed. And then where he grew up in South America,
they forced him to force himself to become right-handed. They actually used to restrict the movement
of his left hand. So he was forced to write.
So, and then you have hook, hook lefties and hook righties.
I know this is a deep dive and we probably don't want to go into every derivation of this.
But so for somebody who's left-handed, naturally just starts writing with the left-hand,
there's some genetic predisposition to being left-handed?
Absolutely.
No question about it.
Handedness is not entirely, but strongly genetic.
So there is something about the ties all of this.
And what does handiness, for example, have to do with where the part of your brain that controls language?
Well, it turns out that the parts that control the hand are very close to the areas that really are responsible for the vocal tract.
Again, part of the motor cortex and part of this brain area called the precentral gyrus.
And there are some theories that because of their proximity, that these parts of the brain might develop together early in utero.
And they might have a head start compares to the right side.
and because they have a head start that things solidify there.
This is one theory of why this happens.
And people who are left-handed,
it still turns out that the vast majority of people have language on the left side,
but it's not 99%.
It's more like 70%.
So if you're left-handed,
it's still more likely that the language part of your brain
is going to be on the left side,
but there's going to be a greater proportion,
maybe 20-30%,
where it's either in the way,
both hemispheres or on the right side. And just to make this a little bit more interesting,
is that when people have strokes on the left side, and if they're lucky enough to recover from
those strokes, sometimes that involves reorganization, this term that we call plasticity earlier,
where the areas around where the stroke take on that new function in a way that they didn't
have before, that can certainly happen in the left hemisphere.
but there are also instances where the right hemisphere can also start to take on the function
of language, where when it was once on the left and then transfers to the right.
So the thing that I think about a lot is that the machinery probably exists on both sides,
but we don't use them together all the time.
In fact, we may strongly bias once.
side or the other, just like we use our two hands in very, very different ways. It's a little bit the same
with the brain. Well, it's because of what we do with the brain that actually is why we use the hands
in different ways. And the same thing goes for language, which is, again, the substrates, the
organ, the language organ, the part of the brain that process it probably has very similar
machinery on the left side as the right. And the right may have the capability to do it. But
in real everyday use, the brain specializes one of the sides in order for us to use it functionally.
That's a theory.
You're bilingual, correct?
Yeah.
You speak English and Chinese.
Yeah.
For people that are bilingual and that learn two or more, bilinguals too, obviously, but learn both languages,
where let's say more languages from an early time in life, do they use the same brain area to generate
that language or perhaps they use the left side to speak English and the right side to speak
Chinese. Do we know anything about bilingualism in the brain? I think we know a lot about bilingualism,
the brain. The answers are still out there, the final answers on it. And part of the answer is,
yes, absolutely. We use some parts of the brain. Very similarly. We actually have a study in the lab
right now where we're looking at this, where people who speak one language or another, or bilingual,
and we're looking at how the brain activity patterns occur when they're hearing one language versus
the other. And what's striking to see actually is how overlapping they really can be,
even though the person may have no idea of the language that they're hearing, the English part
of the brain is still processing that and maybe trying to interpret it through any
English lines, for example. So the short answer is that with bilingualism, there are shared
circuitry, there's the shared machinery in the brain that allows us to process both. But it's not
identical. It's the same part of the brain, but what it's doing with the signals can be very, very
different. And what I mean by that precisely is not the instantaneous detecting of one sound to the
next, but the memory of the sequences of those particular sounds that give rise to things
like words and meaning, that can be highly variable from one individual to the next. And those
neurons are very, very sensitive to the sequences of the sounds, even though the sounds
themselves might have some overlap between languages. Fascinating. Okay, so we've talked about
brain areas and a little bit about lateralization. I want to get back to the hands and some things
related to emotion in a little bit.
But maybe now we could go into those brain areas
and start to ask the question,
what exactly is represented or mapped there?
And for people who perhaps aren't familiar
with brain mapping and representation and receptive fields,
perhaps the simplest analogy might be the visual system
where I look at your face, I know you, I recognize you,
and certainly there are brain areas
that are responsible for face recognition.
But the fact that I know that that's your face,
and for those listening, I'm looking at Eddie's face,
the fact that I know that that's your face at all
is because we are well aware that there are cells
that represent edges and that represent dark and light.
And those all combine in what we call a hierarchical structure.
They sort of build up from basic elements,
as simple as little dots, but then lines and things that move, et cetera,
to give a coherent representation of the face.
When I think about language, I think about words and just talking.
If I sit down to do a long podcast or I think about asking you a question, I don't even think
about the words I want to say very much. I mean, I have to think about them a little bit,
one would hope, but I don't think about individual syllables unless I'm trying to, you know,
accent something or it's a word that I have a particular difficulty saying where I want to
change the cadence, et cetera. So what's represented in the neurons, the nerve cells in these areas?
Are they representing vowels, consonants? And how do things like inflection, like, I
I occasionally will poke fun at upspeak,
but there's a, I think a healthy,
a normal version of Opspeak
where somebody's asking a question,
like for instance, what is that?
That's an appropriate use of upspeak,
as opposed to saying something that is not a question
and putting a lilt at the end of the sentence,
then we call that upspeak,
which it doesn't fit with what the person is saying.
So what in the world is contained in these brain areas,
what is represented to me is,
is perhaps one of the most interesting questions.
And I know this lands square in your wheelhouse.
Sure.
Let's get into this, Andrew,
because this is one of the most exciting stuff
that's happening right now is understanding
how the brain processes these exact questions.
And you asked me earlier,
what is the difference in speech and language?
Speech corresponds to the communication signal.
It corresponds to me moving my mouth
and my vocal track to generate words.
And you're hearing these is an auditory signal.
Language is something much broader.
So it refers to what you're extracting from the words that I'm saying.
We call that pragmatics and sort of are you getting the gist of what I'm saying.
There's another aspect of it that we call semantics.
Do you understand the meaning of these words and the sentences?
There's another part that we call syntax, which refers to how the words are assembled in a grammatical form.
So those are all really critical parts of language.
And speech is just one form of language.
There's many other forms like sign language, reading.
Those are all important modalities for reading.
Our research really focuses on this area that we're calling speech.
Again, the production of this audio signal, which you can't see, but your microphones are picking up.
there are these vibrations in the air that are created by my vocal tract that are picked up by the microphone
in the case of this recording but also picked up by the sensors in your ear.
The very tiny vibrations in your ear are picking that up and translating that into electrical activity.
And what the ear does at the periphery is translates all sounds into different frequencies.
So its main thing to do is to take a speech signal or any other kind of sound and decompose it,
meaning separate that sound into different kind of signals.
And in the case of hearing, what it's doing is separating it out into low, middle, high frequencies.
It has a very, very high resolution.
It's doing it very quickly, and it's doing it a really fine way to separate all of those different sounds.
So if you look at the periphery near the nerve that goes to your ear, those nerve fibers,
some of them are tuned to low frequencies.
Some of them are tuned to high frequencies.
Some of them are tuned to the middle frequencies.
And that is what your ear is doing.
It's taking these words and splitting them up into different frequencies.
And for those of you out there that aren't familiar with thinking about things in the so-called frequency space,
base tones would be lower frequencies and high-pitched tones would be higher frequencies,
just to make sure everyone's on the same page.
So the sound of my voice, the sound of your voice
or any sound in the environment
is being broken down into these frequencies.
Are they being broken down into very narrow channels of frequency?
Or are they, I want to avoid nomenclature here,
or are they being binned as fairly broad frequencies?
Because we know low, medium, and high,
but for instance, I can detect
whether or not something's approaching me
or moving away from me,
depending on whether or not it sweeps
louder or
right towards our way it's subtle
but and of course it's combined with what I see
and my own movement but
how finely sliced
is our perception of the auditory world
oh extraordinarily
precise I mean we take these
millisecond cues
the millisecond differences between
the sound coming to one ear
let's say you're right here versus your left
to understand what direction that sound came from.
Those are only millisecond differences.
And that's how precise this works.
But on the other hand, it does a lot of computation on this.
It does a lot of analysis as you go up.
And a lot of our work is focused on the part of the brain that we call the cortex.
The cortex is the outermost part of brain
where we believe that sounds are actually converted into words and language.
So there's this transformation where at the ear words are decomposed and, you know, turned into these elemental frequency channels.
And then as it goes up through the auditory system, hits the cortex.
There are some things that happen obviously before it gets to the cortex.
But when it gets to cortex, there's something special going on, which is that that part of the brain is looking for specific sounds.
And specifically, what I mean by that is the sounds of human language.
So the ones that are the different consonants and vowels in a different language.
One of the ways that we have studied this is looking in patients who have epilepsy.
And in a lot of these cases where the MRI looks completely normal,
we have to put electrodes surgically on a part of the brain.
The temporal lobe is a very, very common place.
So we've done a lot of our work looking at how the temporal lobe processes speech sounds
because we're looking for where the seizures start,
but then we're also doing brain mapping for language and speech so we can protect those areas.
We want to identify the areas that we want to remove to cure someone's seizures,
but we also want to figure out the areas that are important for speech and language
to protect those so that we can do a surgery that's effective and safe.
And so in our research, and why it's become a really important addition to our knowledge
is that we have electrodes directly recording from the human brain surface.
A lot of technology we work with right now is recording on the order of millimeters.
And they can record millisecond time resolution of neural activity.
and what we see is extraordinary patterns of activity when people hear words and sentences.
If you look at that part of the brain that we call Wernicke's area,
then this part of the temporal lobe, this whole area lights up when you hear words or speech.
And it's not in a way that is like a general light bulb warming up and it's generally lin up,
But what you actually see is something much, much more complicated, which is a pattern of activity.
And what we've done in the last 10 years is to try to understand what does that pattern come from?
And if we were to look at each individual site from that part of the brain, what would we see?
What parts of words are being coded by electrical activity in those parts of the brain?
Remember, the cortex is using electrical activity to transmit information.
do analysis. And what we're doing is we're eavesdropping on this part of the brain as it's processing
speech to try to understand what each individual site is doing. And what are those sites doing? Or could
you give us some examples of what those sites are doing? So for instance, are they sites that are
specific for, or we could say even listening for consonants or for vowels or for inflection or
for emotionality? What's in there?
Okay, well.
What makes these cells fire?
Yeah.
What gets them excited?
Yeah.
What gets them going is hearing speech in particular, there are some of these really focal sites.
Again, just on the order of a millimeter or at some level, single neurons that are tuned to consonants.
Some are tuned to vowels.
Some are tuned to particular features of consonants.
What I mean by that are different categories.
of consonants. There's a class of consonants that we call plosive consonants. There's a little bit
of linguistic jargon, but I'm going to make a point here with that is that certain classes of
sounds, when you make them, it requires you to actually close your mouth temporarily.
Now I'm going to be thinking about this. So plosive, like plosives, like saying the word plosive
does requires that. Exactly. So what's cool about that is that we actually have no idea what's going on
in our mouth when we speak. We really really,
have no idea. Some people definitely have no idea. Well, not just like in terms of what you're saying
sometimes, but actually like how you're actually moving, you know, the different parts of vocal
track. And I have a feeling if we actually required understanding, we would never be able to
speak because it's so complex. It's such a complex feat. Some people would say it's the most complex
motor thing that we do as a species, is this speaking, not, you know, the extreme feats of
acrobatics or athleticism, but speaking.
Well, and especially when one observes, you know, opera or people who, you know, freestyle
rappers, you know, and of course it's not just the lips, it's the tongue.
Yeah.
And you've mentioned two other structures.
Ferrinx and larynx are the main ones that the, can you tell us just, just educate us
at a superficial level, what the pharynx and larynx do differentially?
Because I think most people aren't going to be familiar with that.
So I'll talk primarily about the larynx here for a second, which is that if you think about when we're speaking, really what we're doing is we're shaping the breath.
So even before you get to the larynx, you've got to start with the expiration.
So we fill up our lungs and then we push the air out.
That's a normal part of breathing.
and what is really amazing about speech and language is that we evolved to take advantage of
that normal physiologic thing at a larynx.
And what the larynx does is that when you're exhaling, it brings the vocal folds together.
Some people call them vocal cords.
They're not really cords.
They're really vocal folds.
They're two pieces of tissue that come together, and a muscle brings them together.
And then what happens is when the air comes through the vocal folds, when they're together,
they vibrate at really high frequencies, like 100 to 200 hertz.
Yours is probably about 100 hertz.
Whereas yours is 200?
No, no.
Most male voices are around 100.
And then the average female voice is around 200 hours.
And as you know, I've always had the same voice.
Yes, yes.
It was a point of shame when I was a kid.
Folks, my voice never changed.
I always had the same voice.
This is a discussion for another time.
Yeah.
Well, it's a great voice, you know, a great baritone voice.
But I know in your voice, it's a low-frequency voice.
And the reason why men and women generally have different voice qualities
is it has to do with the size of the larynx and the shape of it.
Okay, so in general, men have a larger voice box or larynx.
And the vibrating frequency, the resonance frequency of the vocal folds,
when the air comes through them, is about 100 hertz for men and about 200 for women.
So what happens is, okay, so you're taking, you take a breath, breath in, and then as the air is coming out, the vocal folds come together, and the error goes through, that creates the sound of the voice that we call voicing.
And that's the energy of your voice.
It's not just your voice characteristic.
It's the energy of your voice.
It's coming from the larynx there.
It's a noise.
And then it's the source of the voice.
And then what happens is that energy, that sound goes up through the parts of the vocal track,
like the pharynx, into the oral cavity, which is your mouth and your tongue and your lips.
And what those things are doing is that they're shaping the air in particular ways that create consonants and valves.
So that's what I mean by shaping the breath.
It just starts with this escalation.
You generate the voice in the larynx.
And then everything above the larynx is moving around,
just like the way my mouth is doing right now,
to shape that air into particular patterns that you can hear is words.
Fascinating.
And immediately makes me wonder about,
are more primitive or non-learned vocalizations like crying or laughter.
Babies will cry.
Babies will show laughter.
Are those sorts of vocalizations produced by the language areas like vernequies,
or do they have their own unique neural structures?
Yeah, interesting question.
So we call those vocalizations.
A vocalization is basically where someone can create a sound.
like a cry or a moan, that kind of sound.
And it also involves the exhalation of air.
It also involves some phonation at the level of larynx
where the vocal folds come together to create that audible sound.
But it turns out that those are actually different areas.
So people who have injuries in the speech and language areas
oftentimes can still moan, they can still vocalize.
And it is a different part of the brain.
I would say an area that even non-human primates have that can be specialized for vocalization.
It's a different form of communication than words, for example.
The intricacy of these circuits in the brain and their connections to the pharynx and larynx is just, it's almost overwhelming in terms of thinking about just how complicated it must be.
and yet some general features and principles
are starting to emerge from your work
and from the work of others.
If we think about that work and we think about, for instance,
Vernanke's area, if I were to record from neurons
in Vernanke's area at different locations,
would I find that there's any kind of systematic layout?
For instance, in terms of, we've talked about sound frequency,
we know that low frequencies are represented
at one end of a structure and high frequencies
at the other. This is true actually, at least from my earlier training within the year itself,
within the cochlea, early work of von Beccasie and from cadavers, right? They actually figure this out
from dead people, which is incredible. A fascinating literature, people should look up. And in the visual
system, we know that, for instance, you know, visual position where things are is mapped systematically.
In other words, neurons that sit next to each other in the brain represent portions of visual
space that are next to each other in the real world. What is the organization of language in
areas like vernicis and brokhas? For instance, I think of the vowels, AEI-O-U, as a kind of a coherent unit,
but do I find the A-Norons or next to the E-Norons or next to the A-E-I-O-U? Is that vowel representation
also laid out in order or is it kind of salt and pepper? Is it random?
That's been one of the most important questions we've been trying to answer for the past decade.
So there is a part of the brain that we call the primary auditory cortex, and the primary
auditory cortex is deep in the temporal lobe.
And if you looked at that part of the brain, there is a map of different sound frequencies.
So if you look at the front of that primary auditory cortex, you'll find low frequency sounds.
And then as you march backwards in that cortex, it goes from low to medium to high frequencies.
It's organized in this really nice and orderly way.
And it turns out there's not just one.
There's like mirrors of that tone frequency map in the primary auditory cortex.
The areas that are really important for speech are on the side of that.
And we now think that speech can go straight to the same.
speech cortex without having to go through the primary auditory cortex, that it has its own
pathway to get to the part of the brain that processes speech. And when we've looked at that
question about, is there a map? The short answer is yes. There is a map. But it is not structured
universally across all people in a way that we can clearly see right now. It is like a salt and pepper
map of the different features in speech.
So before we talked about these sounds that are called plosives, you make a plosive when
the mouth or something in the oral cavity closes temporarily.
And when it opens, that creates that fast plosive sound.
So when you say dad or, you know, the ball, like the bee and ball, that kind of thing,
you will notice that your lips actually close
and then it's the release of that
that creates that particular sounds.
Okay, so those are the sounds that we call plosives.
Those are like Bhattaga, pataka.
Those are a certain class of consonants
that we call plosive sounds.
There's another class of sounds
that we call fricatives in linguistics.
Frickatives are created by turbulence
in the airstream as it comes out through the mouth.
And the way that we make that turbulence is getting the mouth and the lips to close almost until they're completely shut.
Or putting the tongue to near the teeth to almost get it completely shut.
But just have a narrow aperture that creates a turbulence in the airflow that we perceive as a high frequency sound.
So those are the sounds like shah and thaw, those kind of things.
Those are, if you look at the frequencies, they're higher frequencies,
and those are created by specific movements that you constrict the airflow to create turbulence.
And we hear it as shah, sah, th.
So if I say that.
Exactly.
And as opposed to a plosive where I'd say explosive.
Right.
Now, of course, I'm emphasizing here.
Yeah.
Well, this explains something and solves a mystery, which is recently I've been fascinated
by the work of a physician scientist back east, Dr. Shana Swan,
who's done a lot of work on things that are contained
in pesticides and foods that are changing hormone levels.
And she refers to phallates, which is spelled, Pete.
So it's both a plosive and of the th.
So it's combining the two,
and it's one of the most difficult words
in the English language to pronounce.
Second only perhaps to the correct pronunciation
of ophthalmology.
So it's a combination of a plosive
and one of these th sounds,
and that's probably why it's difficult.
That's exactly right.
In fact, we have a term for that.
That's called a consonant cluster.
So sometimes syllables will just have one consonant.
But when we start stacking certain syllables in a sequence,
and there's rules that actually govern which consonants can be in a particular sequence for a given language,
that makes it more complicated.
And certain languages have a lot more consonant clusters than others.
So for instance.
So for instance, Russian, for example, has a lot of constant clusters.
English has a lot of them.
The other languages that have very, very few, for example, Hawaiian.
Hawaiian has an inventory of about 12 to 14 different phonemes, 14 different consonants and vowels.
English, on contrast, has about 40 different consonants and vowels.
So languages have different inventories.
They can overlap for sure.
But different languages use different sound elements, combine and recombine those elements
to give rise to different words and meanings.
Can we say that there is a most complicated language out there or among the most complicated, would it be Russian?
It's definitely high up there.
English is up there too, actually.
Yeah, German as well.
And in terms of learning multiple languages during development, my understanding is that if one wants to become bilingual or trilingual, best to learn those languages simultaneously during development, ideally before age 12, if one hopes to not have an accent and speaking them later.
Is that correct?
or do you want to revise that?
Well, basically the earlier and the earlier is better,
the more intense it is and the more immersive it is.
The longer, you know, that you can be exposed to that is really important.
A lot of people can get exposed to early and basically lose it,
even though it's, quote, quote, during that sensitive period,
unless it's maintained, it can be very easily lost.
Then I think another aspect of it that's very interesting is some of the social
requirements for it too. It's pretty clear that you can only go so far just listening to these
sounds from a tape recording or something like that. There's something extra about real human
interactions that activates the brain's sensitivity to different speech bounds allows us to become
specialized for them for a given language. So returning to what's mapped, what the representations are
in the brain, I'm starting to get a picture.
now based on these plosives and these th sounds.
And what I find so interesting and logical about that is it maps to the motor structures
and the actual pronunciation of the sounds, not necessarily to the meaning of the individual
words.
Now, of course, it's related to the meaning of the individual words, but it makes good sense
to me why something as complex as language, both to understand and to generate, would
map to something that is essentially motor in design because as you point out, I have to generate
these sounds and I have to hear them generated from others. However, there's reading and there's
writing and writing is certainly motor. Reading involves some motor commands of the eyes and
etc. Where do reading and writing come into this picture? Are they in parallel with, as we would
say in neuroscience or are they embedded within the same structures? Are they part of the same
series of computations? Yeah. So to address the first part is that we've got this map of these
different parts of consonants and valves. And when we look at how they lay out in this part
of the brand that we call Warnikers area, we've spent a lot of time really just dissecting this
millimeter by millimeter, the term that you use is very apropos. It's salt and pepper. It's not random.
There is this kind of selectivity to these individual speech sounds. And one point I want to make about it
is this, is that in English, for example, there are about 40 different phonemes. Phonemes are just
consonants or vowels or individual speech segments. But these articulatory features that you
referred to, for example, the characteristic sounds that are generated by specific movements in the mouth,
you can more or less reduce that to about 12 different features. Okay, these are specific movements of the
tongue, the jaw, the lips, the larynx. There are about 12 of these movements. And just like you said,
Andrew, by themselves, they have no meaning. They're just movements.
But what's incredible about it is that you take these 12 movements and you put them in combinations
and you start putting them in sequence.
We as humans use those 12 set of features to generate all words.
And because we can generate nearly an infinite number of words with that code of just 12 features,
we have something that generates essentially all possible meaning.
Because that's what we do as humans.
We generate meanings.
I'm trying to communicate one idea.
to another, which to me is extraordinary. A parallel would be, for example, DNA. There's four
base pairs in DNA, but with those four base pairs in a specific sequence can generate an
entire code for life. And speech is the same way. It's like you've got these fundamental elements
that by themselves have no meaning, but when you put them together, give rise to every possible
meaning. So with regard to your second point about reading, writing, it's
a fascinating question.
Speech and language is part of who we are as humans.
That's part of how we evolved, and it's hardwired and, you know, molded by experience.
Reading and writing are a human invention.
It's something that was added on to the architecture of the brain, and because reading
or writing are fairly recent in human evolution, it's essentially too quick for anything to
like have a dramatic change in let's say a new brain area or some kind of specialization.
Instead, what happens is that whenever any kind of behavior becomes ultra-specialized in any
of us or any organism, we can sort of take some areas that are normally involved with vision,
for example, and specialize it for the purpose of reading.
So all of us have a part of our brain in the back of the temporal lobe that interface with
thecipital visual cortex that we call a visual word form area.
There's actually a part of the brain that is very sensitive to seeing words like either
typed or handwritten.
There's a part of the brain that also is sensitive to seeing things like faces.
So these are things that are all conditioned on what's important, you know, to survive.
So reading and writing are an invention, and there are things that have mapped to functions
that the brain already has.
And one of the really important things about reading and writing is that when we learn to
read and write, especially with the reading part, it maps to the part of the brain that we've been
talking about, which is the part that's processing speech sounds. So some of us kind of think about
it. These are two different things. One is hearing sounds through your ears. The other is reading
where you're actually seeing things through your eyes and then getting into language system.
Well, it turns out that the auditory speech cortex is the primal and primitive fundamental
area that's really important for speech. And what happens with the reading is once it gets
through that visual cortex, it's going to try to map those reading signals to the part of the
brain that's trying to make sense of sounds, the sounds of words, what we call it phonology.
Now, why is this important? It has a lot of relevance to how we learn to write. And in some kids
with dyslexia, dyslexia is a neurological condition where a child. A child's a child.
in some case an adult, has trouble reading, for example.
And in many of those cases, it's because that mapping between how we see the words
to the way that the brain processes, the sounds, is something different.
It's a little bit different than people who can read really well.
So when you're reading, a lot of times you're actually activating the part of the brain
that is processing the words that you hear.
What is the current treatment for dyslexia?
I've heard that it's a deficit in some of the motion processing systems of the visual system.
You know, people are, their eyes are jumping as opposed to more linear reading across,
or I suppose if it were Chinese, it would be, you know,
I want to presume people are always reading English,
or I suppose if it's Hebrew, they're going from the opposite side of the page.
What can be done for dyslexia and do any of the modern treatments for dyslexia involve changing things from the speech side as opposed to just the quote unquote reading side, given that speech and reading are interconnected?
Yeah, absolutely.
So again, I think in the beginning, people might have thought this was purely a visual abstraction or something really just about the visual system.
But there's been more recognition that it could be both or it could be either depending on the particular instance.
it's very clear that there are many kids with dyslexia
where the problem is a problem of phonological awareness.
So, you know, it can be very hard to detect
because they may understand the words that you were saying,
but because the brain is so good at pattern recognition,
sometimes even if the individual species sounds are not crystal clear,
it can compensate that so that you can have an individual
who can hear the words but not be able to,
essentially hear them when they're reading those same words. And so what can happen with that
is that you can have this disconnection between what they're seeing and what they need in order
to hear it as words and process it in its language. And so skilled readers usually need that
root first. They've got to map the vision to the sound in order to get that sort of like
foundation. But then over time, the reading has its direct connection to the language parts of the
brain. And we don't necessarily always need to map to sounds. You know, you can basically develop
a parallel route. And we as readers actually use both all the time. So for example, if it's a new
word that you've never seen before, sometimes you try to like pronounce it in your mind, you know,
and try to hear what that word is. Even though you're not actually saying it, you're trying to just generate
what those sounds might be like.
And that's the part where we're kind of relying on how we learn to read in the first place,
which is mapping those word images to the sounds that go along with them.
But in other times, if you're a really proficient reader,
you're just seeing the words and you can map them directly to meaning without having to go through that process.
Yeah, I'm a big fan of listening to audiobooks.
And of course, I also listen to podcasts quite a lot.
a lot, but I also am a strong believer based on the research that I've seen that reading books,
physical books, could be on Kindle, I suppose, but reading a physical book is useful for being
able to articulate well and structure sentences and build what are essentially paragraphs, which
is what I'm required to do when I do solo episodes of the podcast. I've noticed over the years
as text messaging has become more popular.
And there's essentially an erosion of punctuation
or the need to have complete sentences.
And now that's sort of transferred to email as well.
It's become acceptable to just say,
you know, fragmented sentences and email.
And it seems likely that it's starting to impact
the way that people speak as well.
And I don't think this has anything to do with intelligence
or education level.
but are you aware of any evidence that how we read and what we read and whether or not we consume
information purely through reading or mainly through auditory sources, does it change the way that we
speak? Because after all, the vernice and Broca's area and the other auditory and speech production
areas are heavily intermeshed. And so it would make perfect sense to me that what we hear
and the patterns of sound they're being communicated to us
would also change the way that we speak.
Yeah, that's a really fascinating point.
There's this idea that there's like this proper way to speak,
like that there's the right way, for example,
what are the appropriate, you know, like for example, in school,
you're oftentimes told like, you should say it like this,
not say it like that, you know, and every language kind of has that.
It turns out that that's really,
unnatural. Languages in speech in particular change over time. It evolves. And it can happen very
quickly. The things that we call dialects, for example, are just different ways of speaking. And someone
can just be in one environment and change from one dialect to the other. And in some people,
it kind of is really fixed. And there's this idea that, you know, like in school that we're like
told that there's this right way. But,
in reality, that's not true.
Language change and speech change is completely normal and happens all the time.
And it can be really dramatic.
Like certain cultures and communities, if they are isolated, they can develop a whole new
language, a whole new set of words, for example, new ways and dialects that are independent
from people to the point where it's unintelligible even to others.
And so the basic idea is that sound change is part of the way it works.
And the brain is very sensitive to those kind of changes.
Speaking of learning new languages, I'm assuming it's possible to learn new languages
throughout the lifespan, correct?
Yeah.
I've also heard these kind of fantastical stories of somebody has a stroke and then suddenly,
spontaneously can speak French fluently, whereas prior to the stroke they could not.
Is there any merit to those stories whatsoever?
I find it very hard to believe that there was a complete map representation of a language
in somebody's brain that they were completely unaware of.
And then because of damage to a brain area, that capacity to speak that language was somehow unveiled.
It just seems too wild and, I don't want to say good to be true.
because nobody wants a stroke, but it just seems outrageously implausible.
Well, there are aspects of that that certainly are implausible.
So I don't know of any true case that I've ever seen or experienced myself or even read
about where, for example, there was an injury to the brain that resulted in loss of, well,
essentially a gain of function, meaning like just all of a sudden start speaking in other
language. So for example, if you had a stroke and you never spoke French and then you had it
and then all of a sudden you're speaking, that I've never heard, I've never seen. However,
there is a condition that is well acknowledged and I have seen one case of this called a foreign
accent syndrome, which is peculiar because there are people who have an injury to the part of the
brain where it sounds like they're starting to speak this other language, but they're not actually
speaking the language. It just sounds like it. And this goes back to what we were talking about
earlier, about these areas that are really important for speech control of the vocal tract,
this area in the precentral gyrs. People have documented where, you know, patients have had
strokes there. And after that, it sounds like they're speaking Spanish as opposed to English,
or it sounds like they have the intonational properties of French or Russian as compared to their
original native language.
They're not learning all the rest of it, like the meaning and the grammar, et cetera,
but they're adopting some of the phonology.
And part of that is just because it's not working the way it normally does.
So there is something actually called a foreign accent syndrome that people are going to have after a stroke.
Interesting.
I'm curious about auditory memory.
When I was a kid, I used to get into bed at night, and I'd close my eyes, and I would replay conversations that I had heard during the day or people's voices.
I actually can remember calling your house when we were young kids, because I don't speak any Chinese, but I'd have to ask for you.
I'd say, I think it was Eddie Sibbutzai.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then someone, whoever answered the phone, would say, would go get you.
And then I say, shish, which I believe means thank you, right?
That's the total of the Chinese that I speak, by the way.
But I will never forget that.
I'll just never forget it.
I suppose if I have a stroke or something of that sort,
at some point I'll forget it and I won't know that I've forgotten it.
But in all seriousness, I remember that to this day.
I couldn't spell that out.
I wouldn't know how.
Certainly not in Chinese.
But even a transliteration I couldn't do using English letters.
where are memories of sounds stored?
Because within our days and across our lives,
we have an infinite number of auditory experiences,
just like we have an infinite number of visual experiences.
Where are they stored?
And what is the structure of their storage?
What am I calling upon?
Besides, of course, the motor commands that are required to say
what I just said in Chinese, which I won't repeat again,
because somehow may you get right there.
the first time, or at least not terribly wrong,
then I don't want to botch it the second time.
Where is that stored and how does that work?
And more importantly, as I speak my native language, English,
am I pulling from a memory bank?
Because it doesn't feel like it.
I'm just telling you what I want to say.
I'm doing my best to communicate clearly and succinctly.
Usually not so good at the succinct part.
But where is the bank of information?
On my keyboard, on my computer,
I have the letters and I have certain elements of punctuation in the space. What am I pulling from? Am I pulling from those
plosives? But if so, how can I do it so quickly? Even for people that speak slowly, it appears more or less fluid.
This to me is overwhelmingly impressive that the brain can do that. How does it do that?
Well, first of all, I'm, I am impressed that 35 years later.
Well, I had to get a hold of you.
Yeah, so I am impressed 35 years later that you can still remember that.
But only that.
That's fine.
I'm still very impressed.
But clearly it was something important to you.
And so the short answer is that memory is very distributed.
So it's almost like the question that you asked me is Bill posed.
Because you asked me where.
Well, it's not one specific area.
It's actually really distributed.
It's not just one particular area.
In fact, I'm fairly certain that if we were to injure that part of the brain
called the Warnichies area, you may still even have memories of that.
People can have injuries of Broca's area or certainly the pre-central gyrus
and be able to sing happy birthday, for example.
example, when it's embedded in melody or highly rehearsed things like counting despite not being able
to speak, which is incredible, right? It's like you can see a patient, for example, who can't
really put together a sentence. You ask them, how are you feeling today? They can't even get
utter a word, but then you ask them to count sometimes and they'll get up to any number, really.
And so there are some things that are really built into our motor memory and it's distributed.
It's not one particular part of the brain.
It's actually multiple areas where that memory is distributed.
And thank God that's the way it is because it's very rare in the kind of surgeries that I do
where you go and you remove a part of piece of the brain that someone forgets these kind of long-term memories
or these long-term motor skills that they have, that's very, very rare.
It's the number one question the patient will ask me, like,
am I going to be the same?
And am I going to remember, you know, my wife?
Or I'm going to have, am I going to remember, you know, these thoughts of my birthday
when I was 10 years old?
And I've never really seen that kind of severe amnesia unless it's a very, very
severe injury that involves almost the entire brain. And thank God. So a lot of that information
is really distributed across the entire brain. Speaking of storage of an ability to speak,
you are doing some amazing work and have achieved some pretty incredible, well-deserved recognition
for your work in bringing language out of paralyzed people, essentially allowing people
who are locked in to a paralyzed state or otherwise unable to articulate speech using brain machine
interface, essentially translating the neural activity of areas of the brain that would produce
speech into hardware, wires and things of that sort, artificial, non-biological tools
in order to allow paralyzed people to communicate.
we will provide a link to some of the popular press coverage of that work in the original papers.
But if you would be so kind as to tell us what those experiments look like,
who these people are who are locked in and that you allow to communicate.
And then especially interesting to me, some of the directions that you're taking this now,
which is beyond just people being able to think about what they want to say
and words coming out on a screen or through a microphone,
but actually making the interactions between these people in the real world more elaborate and more real.
If that seems mysterious to people, I'm going to let Eddie tell you what they're doing with this
rather than put any more detail on it.
Oh, okay.
Well, thanks for asking about this.
This has really been some of the exciting recent work from the lab.
So for the last decade, we've really been focusing on the basic science, meaning trying to understand.
understand how the brain extracts and produces speech sounds and words.
We've done a lot of work trying to figure out how these parts of the brain
control these individual elements that give rise to all words and meanings.
And so it was about six years ago where we realized we actually have a pretty good idea of how this code works.
we had identified all of these different elements that we could decode in epilepsy patients,
for example, when they had electrodes on the brain as part of their surgeries,
we could decode all of the different consonants in vowels of English.
That was about six years ago.
So a natural question was this, which is,
if we understand that electrical code,
can we use that to help someone who is paralyzed
and can't get those signals out of the brain?
to speak normally.
And that's in the setting of people who are paralyzed.
So there are a series of conditions.
They include things like brainstem stroke.
The brain stem is the part of the brain that connects the cerebrum,
which is the top part, does our thinking
and a lot of the motor control, speech, language, everything.
And the brainstem is what connects that to the spinal cord
and the nerves that go out to the face and vocal tract.
So if you have a stroke there, basically,
you could be thinking all the wild, creative, intelligent thoughts you have in the mind and the
cerebral, but you can't get them out into words, or you can't get them out to your hand to write them
down. So that's a very severe form of paralysis called brainstem stroke. There's another kind of
conditions that we call neurodegenerative, where the nerve cells die basically or atrophy
in a condition called ALS.
and that's a very severe form of paralysis.
And it's extreme form, people essentially lose all voluntary movement.
So Stephen Hawking would be a good example of someone with ALS, Lou Gehrig's disease.
He's an example of someone who had ALS, but not a great example of what typical course of ALS.
So for reasons not clear, the progression of disease largely stabilized to the point where he could twitch, you know, a cheek muscle or move.
his eyes, let's say. And most people, it's very rapid. And many people, they die from it, actually,
you know, within a couple of years of diagnosis. Yeah, he lived a long time in that. He lived a long time.
That's like slanted overstate in his wheelchair. Exactly. And, but he wasn't breathing, you know,
through a tube in his throat, for example, because people with severe ALS, the muscles to their,
to their diaphragm and their lungs essentially give out as well.
they get weakness there and then they can't breathe anymore. So that's another form of paralysis.
And so in our field, these are kind of like the most devastating things that can happen.
I'm not going to really try to compare like what's worse. You know, having brain tumor or stroke,
it's all bad. But this condition of what we call being locked in refers to this idea that
you can have completely intact cognition and awareness,
but have no way to express that,
no voluntary movement, no ability to speak.
And that is devastating because psychologically and socially,
you know, you're completely isolated.
That's what we call Lockton Syndrome.
And it's devastating.
I've seen that throughout my career.
And it's really heartbreaking because, you know,
that the person is there, but you can't see, they can't communicate.
So we've been studying this patterning of electrical activity for consonants and vowels.
And essentially, once we figured out a lot of these codes for the individual phonetic elements,
we took a little bit of a detour, or at least part of the lab, started to focus on this
very specific question.
For people who have these kind of paralysis, could we,
intercept those signals from the brain, the cerebral cortex, as someone is trying to say those
words, and then can we intercept them and then have them taken out of the brain through wires
to a computer that are going to interpret those signals and translate them into words?
So about three years ago, we started a clinical trial. It's called the Bravo trial. It's still
underway. And the first participant in the Bravo trial was a man who had been paralyzed for
15 years. When he was about 20 years old, he came to the United States, was actually working
in Sonoma area, and he was in a car accident. And he actually walked out of the hospital day
after that car accident. But the next day had a complication related to it where he,
He had a very large stroke in the brainstem.
And that turned out to be devastating.
He didn't wake up from that stroke for about a week.
He was in a coma for about a week.
And when he woke up from that coma, he realized that he couldn't speak or move his arms or legs.
And as he told me or communicated to us, that was absolutely devastating.
He wanted really to die at that time.
Could he blink his eyes or move his mouth in any way?
He could blink his eyes.
He had some limited mouth movements,
but couldn't produce any intelligible speech.
He was completely slurred and incomprehensible.
And he survived this injury.
A lot of people who have that kind of stroke just don't survive.
But he survived.
And I also realized that he's just an incredible person,
like a force of nature, in terms of his optimism,
in terms of his ability to make friends despite his condition.
The way he actually communicates, because he has a little bit of residual neck movements,
is that he improvised and had his friends basically put a stick attached to his baseball cap.
Because he could move his neck, he would essentially type out letters on a keyboard screen to get out words.
In fact, this is how he communicated was through a device that he would essentially peck out letters one by one by moving his neck to control this stick,
attached to his baseball cap.
How many years did he use that method of communication until?
For about 15 years.
He hadn't really spoken for about 15 years.
Oh, goodness.
Yeah.
So it was a devastating injury, but, you know, there's something to be said about the human
spirit.
And if there's anyone who embodies it, it is poncho.
That's his nickname, the first participant in our trial.
He has that human spirit.
He persevered.
and in fact, you know, could thrive in his community basically and friends be able to communicate
in this very slow and inefficient way.
Maybe part of that spirit is why he volunteered to be the first person in this trial.
It was a clinical trial, an experiment.
It was a study.
This is not an approved therapy by any means.
This was really something that had not been done before.
And we had a lot of ideas about it, but we didn't know, you know, we had proven a lot of this could be
and some people who are normally speaking,
but to actually put into someone who's paralyzed, number one,
but we don't know the code is the same.
Number two is someone who's not been speaking for 15 years,
whether those signals are actually still there or not.
So it was part of a clinical trial.
It was something that our hospital and also the FDA, you know,
had to approve and looked at very carefully.
But given a lot of the work that we had done,
there was some basis for why this might work.
And so about two and a half years ago,
we did a surgery where we implanted electrodes
onto the parts of the brain that we've been talking about,
these areas that control the vocal track,
the areas that control the larynx,
the areas that control the lips in tongue and jaw movements
when we normally speak.
These are areas that presumably may be active.
That was our hope in his brain,
but he just couldn't get those out to control his mouth in a normal way.
And he underwent a surgery, a brain surgery.
We put an electrode array, and we connected it to a port that was screwed to his skull.
And the port actually goes through his scalp, and he's lived with this now for the last three years.
It is at risk of infection.
These ports eventually have to become wireless in the future,
but we figured out a way to keep that port there
where we can essentially connect him to a computer
through that port.
So he has an electrode array
that's implanted over the part of this brain
that's important for speech.
It's connected to a port.
And then we connect a wire to that port
that translates those
what we call analog brainwaves
and converts them into digital signals.
And then a computer takes those digital signals from those individual sites from the speech cortex
and translates those into words.
Can you describe for us the first time that Pancho spoke through this engineered device?
What was that experience like for you?
And at least from what he conveyed to you, what was that experience like for him?
This is somebody who was essentially locked in except for this rather crude pecking device.
although I'm thoroughly impressed by how adaptive or adaptable poncho was and his friends
engineering that device form is really nothing short of clever because otherwise he would be
truly locked in.
Yeah.
Right.
But what was that moment like?
I can only imagine.
That moment was incredible.
It was truly incredible to be able to see him try to get out a word that was for all practical
purposes, unintelligible, but to be able to take the brain activity and to translate it into text
on a screen. That's what we did. We took those brain waves. We put them through machine learning
or artificial intelligence algorithm that can pick up these very, very subtle patterns. You can't
actually see them with your eye in the brain activity and translate those into words.
And I remember seeing this happening for the first time. You know, it doesn't happen like,
immediately. This is something that took weeks to train the algorithm to interpret it correctly.
But what was incredible about it was to see how he reacted. And he would be prompted to say a
given word like, you know, outside, for example. And then he would think about it, try to say it.
And finally, those words would appear on the screen. And what was really amazing about it was,
was you could really tell that he like got a kick out of that because he would start to
giggle.
You know, his body would shaking away and his head would shaken away that he would start to
giggle.
And that was cool to see.
But then I also realized that when he was giggling, it kind of screwed up the next words decoding.
Is that a bug you've since fixed?
No, we haven't fixed that.
Interesting.
We haven't fixed that.
it's easier just to tell him to stop giggling.
So what was the first word that he said?
Well, I think one of the first sentences that he put together was, you know, can you get my family outside?
Meaning get them out of the room?
No, no.
All these years, you wanted to get away from his family?
No, I think what he meant was, can you get them?
Bring them in.
And so the way this worked was we trained this computer to recognize 50 words.
We started with a very small vocabulary.
that's expanding as we speak.
I think that this is just a matter of time
before these vocabularies become much, much larger.
But we started with a 50 set of words.
We created essentially all the possible sentences
that you could generate from those 50 words.
Why that was important was
you can use all those possible sentences
to create a computational model, computer model,
of all the different word combinations
to give different sentences.
given those 50 words.
And then you can essentially do what we call autocorrect.
It's the same kind of thing that we do when you're texting, for example,
you get the wrong letter in there.
But your phone actually knows, you know, because it's context, what to correct it.
So because the decoding is not 100% correct all the time.
In fact, it's far from that.
It's really helpful to have these other features like autocorrect,
the stuff that we use routinely now with texting,
that makes it correct and then updates it.
So it's a combination of a lot of things.
It's the AI that is translating those brain activity patterns,
but it's also things that we've learned from speech
and speech technologies that, you know,
you put all together and then all of a sudden it starts to work.
And so we were really excited
because that was the first time that someone was paralyzed
and could create words and sentences
that was just decoded from the brain activity.
Incredible. And I know you're very humble, but I'm going to embarrass you by saying, I always knew you were destined for great things since the early age of nine when we first became friends. But when I read that, the news coverage of your work with Poncho and the release of this language from this locked in patient, it literally, you know, it brought tears to my eyes because it's, you know, it's an interesting thing as fellow neuroscientists, right? We explore the brain and we try and find.
find mechanisms and we try and compare those to what other people find and find truths and
principles and build up from those. But pretty rarely is there a case where that route of
exploration leads to something of clinical significance within one's own lifetime. I mean,
that's the reality of science. And oftentimes it's a very distributed process. But in this case,
it's been a magnificent thing to see you move along this trajectory, parsing,
these language and speech areas and then to also do the clinical work in parallel.
Speaking of which, these days we hear a lot about NeuralLink, Elon Musk's company, a neurosurgeon
that came up briefly through my lab, but I can't take any credit for what he knows or does,
which is Matt McDougal is the neurosurgeon at Neurlink. There's some other excellent neuroscientists
there and engineers there. We hear a lot about Neurlink because while brain machine interface
of the sort that you do and that other laboratories do has been going on for a long time.
There's been some press around neural link about the promise of what brain machine interface could do.
For instance, early in our discussion, you talked about how language is constrained by these sound waves.
And typically it's a few people communicating or one person with many people through a podcast, for instance, or a speech.
But the idea has been thrown out there that through the use of stimulating chips or through other brain machine devising, that perhaps one could internalize 50 conversations in parallel.
50x communication or that the memory systems could be augmented to remember 10 times as much information, or even twice as much information in a given period of time.
And my understanding of what they're doing at NeuroLink, which is admittedly crude and from the outside, a few discussions with people there, is that they too are going to pursue clinical goals first.
Things like trying to generate smooth movement in a Parkinsonian patient, trying to adjust movement patterns in someone with Huntington's disease, for instance, things of that sort before they embark on the more sci-fi-like exploration.
of 50xing communication or doubling memory capacity and these kinds of things.
Although I don't know, they may be doing all of those things in parallel.
What are your thoughts about super capabilities of the brain?
I don't even know what word to use.
Supercharging the brain, you know, giving the brain functions for which we've never observed
before in human history.
We have our Einstein's and our Feynman's and our Mersenicks and the, you know, it's unclear
who to put in a line.
that line side by side, but there are Michael Jordans and et cetera.
But we've never heard of or seen somebody who can jump 20 feet in the air.
Or we've heard of people who have photographic memories,
but I don't know that we are aware of any human being in history
who could memorize the entire Library of Congress
or all the works within the Vatican within an hour.
Anyway, you get the idea.
what are your thoughts about manipulating neural circuitry to achieve superhuman or superhuman
or superphysiological functions?
Are we there?
Should we even be thinking about that?
Is it possible, given that neurons simply communicate through electrical activity and
electrical activity can be engineered outside of the brain?
How do you think about it?
And here we don't even have to think about neuralink in particular.
It's just but one example of companies and people in laboratories.
that are quite understandably considering all this.
Well, it's a really interesting time right now.
The science has been going on for decades.
The work that we've done in this field
that you call brain machine interface
has been going on for a while.
And a lot of the early work was just trying to restore
things like our movement
or having people or monkeys control a computer cursor,
for example, on the screen.
That's been going on for decades.
what's been really new is that industry is now involved and some of this is now becoming commercialized
and we're starting to see us now cross over to this field where it's no longer just research
that we're talking about medical products that are designed to be surgically implanted in some cases
there's people doing this kind of work non-invasively as well that don't require surgery
the specific question that you're asking about is an area that we call augmentation so can you
build a device that essentially enhances someone's ability beyond supernormal
memory super communication speeds beyond speech for example um i guess superior uh
precision, athletic abilities.
I think that these are very serious kind of questions to be asking now,
because as you mentioned, the pathway so far is really to focus on these medical applications.
I personally don't think that we've thought enough, actually,
about what these kind of scenarios are going to look like.
And I don't think we've thought through all the ethical implications of what this means
for augmentation in particular.
There's part of this that is not new at all.
Humans throughout history have been doing things to augment our function.
Coffee, nicotine, all kinds of things, all kinds of medications that cross over from medical to consumer.
That is everywhere.
So the pursuit of augmentation or performance or enhancement is really not a new thing.
the questions really as they relate to neuro technologies for example have to do with the invasive nature
for example if these technologies require surgery for example to do something that is not for a medical
application again there that is not exactly new territory either people do that routinely
for cosmetic kind of procedures for physical appearance not necessarily cognitive so I do
think that provided the technology continues to emerge the way that it does, that it's going to be
around the corner. And it probably is not going to be in ways that are super obvious. I don't think it's
going to be like, can we easily memorize every fact in the world, but in forms that are going to be
much more incremental and maybe more subtle. In many ways, we already have that now. Like, for example,
you don't have to have a neural interface embedded in your brain
to get information, essentially access to all information in the world.
You just have to have your iPhone.
Whether you could do it faster through a brain interface,
I definitely wouldn't rule that out.
But think about this, that the systems that we have already
to speak and to communicate have evolved over, you know,
thousands and millions of years,
and they're supported by neural structures that have bandwidth of millions of neurons.
There's no technology that exists right now that people are thinking about that are in commercial
form, certainly, not even in research labs that come anywhere close to what has been
evolved for those natural purposes.
So I'm essentially saying two sides of this, which is we're already getting into this now.
this is not new territory, this topic of augmentation, both physical and cognitive,
we've already surpass that. That's part of what humans do in general. But we are entering this
area of enhanced cognition, these areas that I think the technology is going to be the rate
limiting step and how far we can go. We have not had the full conversations about, number one,
is this what we actually want? Is this going to be good for society?
society, who gets access to this technology?
These are all things that are going to become real world problems.
There's certainly a lot to consider.
In thinking about augmentation and another theme that I've yet to ask you about,
but I'm extremely curious about, which is facial expressions.
Before we talk about the relationship between the musculature of the face and language
and the communication of emotion, I'd love for you to, if you would, touch on a little bit
of what you're doing with patients like Poncho to move beyond somebody who's locked in,
being able to type out words on a screen with their thoughts.
There's a rich array of information contained within the face and facial expression.
And while somebody like Poncho going from having to be completely locked in to being able
to peck out letters on a keyboard to being able to just think of those letters and having them
spelled out, that's a tremendous set of leaps forward towards normalcy.
it's still far and a way different than Pancho speaking with his mouth, which I think,
knowing some people who are restricted, who are quadriplegic, you know, a lot of what they
struggle with in the reward is actually actually a height difference sometimes because they're
seated while other people are standing. This actually, we don't often think about this,
but always have to look up to communicate with people. It's a very different interface in the
world. They manage quite well, of course. But could you tell us what you're doing in terms of
merging the brain machine interface with extraction of speech signals from people who are locked in like poncho
with facial expressions sure yeah well like we described before progress is being made
the proof of principle is out there that you can decode speech that will continue to optimize
and i'm very confident that that's going to improve very very quickly in the coming years
to the point where it's like you know not just a small vocabulary but
a large vocabulary and at reasonable rates at a level that's going to be really helpful.
I'm very optimistic about that.
I think it's the right time to start really thinking about a broader vision of what communication
really is.
So, for example, I'm here with you in person.
We could have done this virtually, probably.
It's pretty easy to do that.
We could have recorded this really separate.
But there is something about being able to actually see your expressions and to understand
And other forms of communication.
So another really important one is nonverbal,
the expressions that you're making.
You know, for example, if you have a quizzical look on your face,
if I'm saying something not clear,
that's a sign to me that I need to rephrase it
or to say in a different way or to slow down, for example.
Or if there's something that really excites you,
I want to continue to say more about it
and talk more in detail, you know, essentially about
a given thing. So facial expressions actually are a really important part of the way we speak. And
there's two things. It's not just the expressions of like how you're feeling and perceiving what I'm
saying, but it's also seeing my mouth move. In your eyes, I actually see my mouth move and my jaw move
in a particular way that actually allows you to hear those sounds better. So having both the visual
information but also the sounds go into your brain is going to improve intelligibly, also make it
more natural. And memory for what is spoken? Perhaps. So here's a call for people not just listening to
podcasts, but watching them and listening to them on YouTube, I suppose, if we were to sort of translate
this to the real world. Exactly. And the reason why we're also very interested in this idea of
not just having text on a screen, but essentially a fully computer animated face, like an avatar
of the person's speech movements and their facial expressions is going to be a more complete
form of expression. Now, you can imagine right now that might just be someone looking at a computer
screen interpreting these signals, but I think the way things are going in the next couple of years,
a lot more of our social interactions,
more than even now,
are going to move into this digital virtual space.
And, of course,
most people are thinking about what that means for most consumers,
but it also has really important implications
for people who are disabled, right?
And how are they going to participate in that?
And so we were thinking really about
for people like Poncho and other people who are paralyzed,
what other forms of BCI can we do
in order to help improve their ability to communicate.
So one is essentially building out more holistic avatars,
you know, things that can essentially decode, you know,
essentially their expressions or the movements associated with their mouth and jaw
when they actually speak to improve that communication.
So do you envision a time not too long from now
where instead of tweeting out something in text,
my avatar will, I'll type it out, but my avatar will just,
say it. It'll be an image of my avatar saying whatever it is I happen to be tweeting at that
moment. That's what we're working on. Yeah. So I don't think that that is going to happen and it's
going to happen soon. And there's a lot of progress in that. And again, we're just trying to enrich
the field of communication, expression to make it more normal. And we actually think that
having that kind of avatar is a way of getting feedback to people learning how to speak through
a speech neuroprosthetic,
that's the device that we call it. It's a speech
neuroprosthetic. That
that is going to be the way that
can help people learn how to do it the quickest,
not necessarily like trying to say words
and having it come on a screen,
but actually have people embody,
feel like it's part of themselves,
or that they are directly controlling
that illustration or animation.
This idea of an avatar
speaking out
what we would otherwise write,
It's fascinating to me on Instagram.
I post videos.
I don't filter them.
But I know there's a lot of discussion nowadays about people using filters to make their
skin look different or the lighting look different.
A lot of filtering and also the use of captions.
So that essentially what you end up with is somewhere between an actual raw video of
what was spoken and an avatar version of it.
I mean, if the mismatch between what's spoken and what's in the caption is too dramatic,
then it doesn't quite work.
But I watch these carefully when people use captions.
And oftentimes there's a smoothing of what was said into the caption.
So it seems much more succinct and accurate.
Oftentimes the reverse is also true where the caption is inaccurate.
And then it creates this kind of jarring mismatch.
In any case, I think this aspect in the clinical realm of using an avatar to allow people like Poncho to essentially be a face that communicates through spoken language from an avatar that looks like them is fascinating and indeed important.
and I think how avatars emerge in social spaces
is going to be really fascinating.
I get a lot of questions about stutter.
I think that for people who have a stutter,
it is itself anxiety-provoking.
Is stutter related to anxiety?
If one has a stutter, what can they do?
Does stutter reflect some underlying neurologic phenomenon
that might distinguish routine.
one kind of stutter and another, what can people with stutter do if they'd like to relieve their stutter?
Yeah, great question.
Stutter is a condition where the words can't come out fluently.
So you have all the ideas, you've got the language intact.
Remember we talked about this distinction between language and speech.
Stuttering is a problem of speech, right?
So the ideas, the meanings, the grammar, it's all there in people stutter, but they can't get the words out fluently.
So that's a speech condition, and in particular it's a condition that affects articulation,
specifically about controlling the production of words in this really coordinated kind of movements
that have to happen in the vocal tract to produce fluent speech.
And stuttering is a condition where people have a predisposition to it.
So there's an aspect of stuttering, you are a stutterer or you're not a stutterer, right?
But people who stutter don't stutter all the time either.
So you could be a stutterer who stutter's it sometimes, but not others.
And really the main link between stuttering anxiety is that anxiety can provoke it and make it worse.
That's certainly true.
but it's not necessarily caused by anxiety.
It can essentially trigger it or make it worse,
but it's not the cause of it, per se.
So the cause of it is still really not clear,
but it does have to do with these kind of brain functions
that we've been talking about earlier,
which is that in order to produce normal fluent speech,
we're not even conscious of what is going on in our mouths and our larynx.
We're not conscious.
And if we were, we would not be able to speak because it's too complex.
It's too precise.
It's something that we have really developed the abilities to do and we do it naturally.
It's part of our programming and part of what we learn inherently.
It's just through exposure.
So stuttering is essentially a breakdown at certain times in that machinery, being able to work in a really coordinated way.
you can think about the operations of these areas that are controlling the vocal tract
let's say speech is like a symphony in order for it to come out normally you've got to have
not just one part the larynx but the lips the jaw they can't be doing their own thing they have
to be very very precisely activated and very very precisely controlled in a way to actually create words
and so in stuttering there's a breakdown of that coordination if somebody has a
stutter, is it better to address that early in life when there's still neuroplasticity
that is very robust?
And if so, what's the typical route for treatment?
I have to imagine it's not brain surgery typically.
I'm guessing there are speech therapists that people can talk to and they can help them
work out where they're getting stuck in the relationship to anxiety.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, part of it is about that anxiety, but a lot of it really has to do with
therapy to sort of like work through and think of tricks basically sometimes to create
conditions where you can actually get the words to come out a lot of some forms of stuttering
are really initiation problems just getting started itself is very hard you want to start with
initial vowel or consonant but it won't emit and so a lot of that therapy is really just
focusing on like how do you create the condition?
you know, for that to happen.
There's another aspect to it that I find very interesting is that the feedback, essentially,
what we hear ourselves say, for example.
And every time that I say a word, I'm also hearing what I'm saying.
So that's what we call auditory feedback.
That turns out to be very important.
And sometimes when you change that, it can actually change the amount someone stutters for better or for worse.
and it's giving us a clue that the brain is not just focused on sending the commands out,
but it's also possibly interacting with the part that is hearing the sounds,
and there's something might be going on in that connection that breaks down when stuttering occurs.
So there are individuals that are stutterers, but they don't stutter all the time.
In those instances, there's something happening in those particular moments
where this very, very precise coordination needs to happen in the brain in order to get the words out fluently.
We talked a little bit about caffeine and why you avoid it.
Because your work requires such precision and calm, and frankly, to me, it seems like you're running a lot of operations and, no pun intended, in parallel when you're doing surgery,
not just thinking about where to direct the instruments, but also thinking like a chess player several steps down the line, what could happen, what if, if then?
type thinking. What are some of the other practices and tools that you use to put yourself into state
for optimal neurosurgery or for, you know, thinking about scientific problems for that matter.
We keep threatening to go running together, but I know you run, correct? Yeah. Do you find running
to be an essential part of your state regulation? Absolutely. Yeah. So for me,
most exercise that I do, I really don't do for physical reasons. I do it for mental reasons.
I can tell, for example, if I don't go on a run or a swim just after a day or two.
And it can have translation, for example, and the way I feel in the operating room or even the way I interact with other people.
So there's no question that those, you know, the mind and body are deeply connected.
and for me personally be able to have opportunity to disconnect for a while.
It turns out to be really, really important.
Now, the operating room for me is another space,
kind of like running or swimming,
where I'm disconnected from the rest of the world.
I don't bring my cell phone into the operating room.
I'm disconnected from the external world for that time that I'm in the surgery.
and all I am doing is just focusing.
Now, that doesn't mean that I'm having complex thoughts
or doing something very complicated.
Sometimes it is like that, but it's not always like that.
There are things that we do in surgery
that are like routine and rote
and are from muscle memory.
So, for example, suturing skin
or doing certain kinds of dissection
or drilling part of the bone, for example,
these are all things that become very rote
after a time. So for me, even being in the operating room, I actually can sometimes fulfill that
purpose. So I really look forward to being in the operating room because that intense focus
allows me to disconnect from all the other things that I'm worrying about, you know, that
are happening on the outside world. You know, we all have those kind of things that happen. And
I'm certainly no exception to that. But strangely,
the operating room for me is a sanctuary. I love being there because we have some control over the
environment. I know what is there. I know the anatomy of the brain. My emotions are going through
routines. And so for me, that's not actually very different than going on a run and letting my, you know,
legs move in specific ways. It's just the same thing for my hands. Do you listen to music or
audiobooks when you run or are you divorced from technology when you run? Well, music helps me like
just stay motivated and distracted from being out of breath and other things. And for me, it's a way
just to catch up with like the world. So sometimes I do, but I do notice that like I don't run
as well, for example. In the operating room, it's a little different, you know, different.
surgeons have preferences. I'm more of the camp where I don't like any distraction whatsoever.
I like people to be able to hear the words that I'm saying without having background noise.
I don't really think about relying on music or other things to try to put me in a state of mind.
You know, I think just being there alone and just, you know, trying to treat it the way it is.
It's a sacred moment where someone's life.
is really directly under your hands.
That enough kind of focuses me very quickly.
And I like that.
It really detaches me from a lot of things that are preoccupying me.
And for those couple of hours that we have a surgery,
we're just focused on one thing only.
It's fantastic.
Again, I think of in the range of brain explorers,
the neurosurgeons, those of your profession,
are to me like the astronauts of neuroscience,
because they're really going to the farthest reach as possible
and they're testing and probing
and really at the front edge of discovering from the species
that we arguably care about the most,
which is humans.
Eddie, I have to say from the first time we became friends,
38 years ago, something like that.
I'm almost reluctant to say,
so I only reveal it in part that Eddie and I became friends
because both he and I shared a love of birds and we had a club at our school, of which there were only two members.
He and I.
Small club.
Small club.
There was one honorary member, and there were certain requirements for being in this club that we won't reveal.
We took a pact of secrecy, and we're going to obey that pact of secrecy.
But to be sitting here with you today, for me, is an absolute thrill, not just because we've been friends for that long or that we got reacquired.
through literally the halls of medicine and science,
but because I really do see what you're doing
as really representing that front,
absolute cutting edge of exploration and application.
I mean, the story of Poncho is but one of your many patients
that has derived tremendous benefit from your work.
And now as a chair of a department,
you of course work alongside individuals
who are also doing incredible work
in the spinal cord, et cetera,
So on behalf of myself and everyone listening, I just really want to thank you for joining us today to share this information.
We will certainly have you back because there's an entire list of other questions we didn't have time to get to, but also just for the work you do.
It's truly spectacular.
Andrew, thanks so much.
You know, I'm very humbled, basically, by what you just said.
And I feel that it's really an extraordinary honor, actually, and privileged, you know, to be here with you to reconnect.
and talk about all these ideas, it's probably not random, you know, that we ended up in similar
spots and interests. I think when we were kids, you know, starts with some deep interests and
kind of nerding out on topics. And it's probably not a coincidence, you know, that we have such
deep interest in this work now. I just feel really lucky to be able to do what I do. It's fun every
day, almost every day, be able to go to work and take care of folks and learn at the same time
and then just close the loop. How do we apply the knowledge that we learn one day to someone who
comes in next week? It's really fun and we don't know everything. We're not even close to it,
but the journey to figure this out is really extraordinary. I mean, it's like you said,
it's exploring new lands literally in the operating room when I'm looking at the exposed cortex
trying to understand is it safe to walk down this part of the cortical landscape or this other
trail you know which one is going to be the one that is going to be safe versus the other that
results in paralysis and inability to talk um well maybe i shouldn't call it fun but it's very
it's very important too
in addition to being really intellectually important
for how we understand how the brain works
and so yeah I feel just really lucky
to be in that opportunity
and we're lucky to have you being one of the people doing it
so thank you ever so much thanks
thank you for joining me today
for my discussion with Dr. Eddie Chang
if you'd like to learn more about his research
into the neuroscience of speech and language
and bioengineering his treatment of epilepsy
and other aspects and diseases and disorders of the brain
please check out the links in our show note captions.
We have links to his laboratory website,
his clinical website,
and other resources related to his critical research as well.
If you're learning from enter and join the Huberman Lab podcast,
please subscribe to our YouTube channel.
That's a terrific zero-cost way to support us.
In addition, please subscribe to the Huberman Lab podcast
on Spotify and Apple.
And on both Spotify and Apple,
you also have the opportunity to leave us up to a five-star review.
If you have questions for us
or comments about the information we've covered
or suggestions about future guests,
please put those in the comment section on YouTube.
We do read all the comments.
Please also check out the sponsors mentioned
at the beginning of today's episode.
That's the best way to support the Huberman Lab podcast.
Not so much today, but in many previous episodes
of the Huberman Lab podcast,
we talk about supplements.
While supplements aren't necessary for everybody,
many people derive tremendous benefit from them
for things like enhancing sleep and focus and hormone optimization.
The Huberman Lab podcast has partnered with momentous supplements.
If you'd like to see the supplements
of the Huberman Lab podcast has partnered with Momentus on,
you can go to LiveMomenus, spelled OUS,
so livemometus.com slash Huberman,
and there you'll see a number of the supplements
that we talk about regularly on the podcast.
I should just mention that that catalog of supplements
is constantly being updated.
As mentioned at the beginning of today's episode,
the Huberman Lab podcast has now launched a premium channel.
That premium channel will feature monthly AMAs
or Ask Me Anythings where I answer your questions in depth,
as well as other premium resources.
If you'd like to subscribe to the premium channel,
you can simply go to Hubermanlab.com slash premium.
I should mention that the proceeds from the premium channel
go to support the standard Huberman Lab podcast,
which will continue to be released every Monday per usual,
as well as supporting various research projects done on humans
to create the sorts of tools for mental health, physical health,
and performance that you hear about on the Huberman Lab podcast.
Again, it's Hubermanlap.com slash premium to subscribe.
It's $10 a month or $100 per year.
If you haven't already subscribed to our zero cost newsletter, we have what is called the neural network newsletter.
You can subscribe by going to Hubermanlap.com, go to the menu, and click on newsletter.
Those newsletters include summaries of podcast episodes, lists of tools from the Huberman Lab podcast.
And if you'd like to see previous newsletters we've released, you can also just go to Hubermanlab.com, click on newsletter in the menu, and you'll see various downloadable PDFs.
If you want to sign up for the newsletter, we just ask for your email.
We do not share your email with anybody.
and again, it's completely zero cost.
If you're not already following me on social media,
it's Huberman Lab on Twitter, on Facebook, and on Instagram.
And at all three of those places,
I cover topics and subject matter
that are sometimes overlapping with the information
covered on the Huberman Lab podcast,
but that's often distinct from information
on the Huberman Lab podcast.
Again, it's Huberman Lab on all social media channels.
Thank you once again for joining me today
for the discussion about the neuroscience of speech,
language, epilepsy,
and much more with Dr. Eddie,
Chang. And as always, thank you for your interest in science.
