• A
  • A
  • A
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
Regular version of the site
  • HSE University
  • News
  • Scientists Reveal How Language Supports Complex Cognitive Processing in the Brain

Scientists Reveal How Language Supports Complex Cognitive Processing in the Brain

Scientists Reveal How Language Supports Complex Cognitive Processing in the Brain

© iStock

Valeria Vinogradova, a researcher at HSE University, together with British colleagues, studied how language proficiency affects cognitive processing in deaf adults. The study showed that higher language proficiency—regardless of whether the language is signed or spoken—is associated with higher activity and stronger functional connectivity within the brain network responsible for cognitive task performance. The findings have been published in Cerebral Cortex.

The relationship between language and complex cognitive processes has long been discussed in psychology and neuroscience. Language is not only important for communication but also helps planning, maintaining rules in memory, switching between tasks, and controlling one's actions. This applies to both spoken language and sign language.

Children of deaf signing parents acquire sign language at the same level and within the same time frame as their hearing peers acquire spoken language. However, many deaf children are born to hearing parents and may not receive sufficient language exposure early in life, during the critical period of language development. Delayed language acquisition can subsequently affect executive functions, leading to a reduced ability to perform tasks such as planning, action control, and maintaining goals in working memory. Studies indicate that these difficulties stem from language background and early language experience rather than from deafness itself.

Valeria Vinogradova, Research Fellow at the HSE Centre for Language and Brain, together with British colleagues, studied how current levels of language proficiency in deaf adults relate to the functioning of large-scale brain networks that support complex cognition. For the first time, the researchers applied a study design making it possible to examine the role of language experience independently of language modality—whether sign or spoken.

The study included data from 24 individuals with congenital or early-onset deafness and 20 hearing adults. The participant groups were matched for age, gender, non-verbal reasoning skills, and visuospatial memory span. The deaf participants showed substantial differences in language experience, providing the necessary variability in language proficiency within this group: some considered English their first language and some grew up in families who communicate in British Sign Language (BSL). To assess participants’ language skills independently of modality—whether spoken or sign language—the participants completed grammaticality judgment tasks in both English and BSL. The higher score from the two tasks was used to derive a modality-independent measure of language proficiency.

Next, participants performed tasks inside an MRI scanner, allowing the researchers to study the brain regions that are involved in task performance. Two experiments were selected for analysis: one assessing working memory and the other planning. Each experiment included two tasks. The first was the main task, which required substantial cognitive effort, while the second served as a control: it was visually similar but did not impose the same cognitive load. In the working memory experiment, participants were required to memorise the locations of objects on the screen and then choose a picture that represented all objects at once. In the planning experiment, they mentally constructed sequences of actions in a computerised version of the classic Tower of London task, which is widely used in psychology to study planning.

The researchers focused on two major brain networks. The first was the task-positive network, which includes frontal and parietal regions that are actively engaged when a person is performing demanding tasks and maintaining attention. The second was the task-negative, or default mode, network, which typically shows reduced activity during task performance and becomes more active when a person is at rest and not engaged in a specific task.

These two systems often operate in opposite phases: when the task-positive network is highly engaged, the task-negative network is typically suppressed. During the experiments, the researchers assessed two parameters: first, the degree to which each network was activated—or, conversely, deactivated—during task performance; and second, the functional connectivity within each network, ie how well coordinated its regions were.

Behaviourally, deaf and hearing participants performed the tasks similarly: in the more complex working memory and planning tasks, both groups made more errors than in the easier control tasks. The fMRI data also revealed the expected pattern: during more demanding tasks, the brain engaged the networks responsible for attention and control more strongly, while suppressing the network typically active at rest. Notably, the difference between complex and simple conditions in the default mode, or task-negative network, was more pronounced in hearing participants than in deaf participants.

Valeria Vinogradova

'The key moment for us was the opportunity to work with data from deaf participants. The greater variability in language proficiency within this group allowed us to detect effects that are often less apparent when studying hearing individuals,' comments Valeria Vinogradova, Research Fellow at the HSE Centre for Language and Brain and one of the study’s authors.

The researchers were able to assess how language proficiency supports performance in non-linguistic tasks. In deaf adults, language skills were associated with the brain measures during working memory: participants with higher language proficiency scores showed higher activity and functional connectivity in the regions involved in maintaining information in mind. In other conditions—including the planning task and the control tasks—no such relationship was observed.

The study results show that language plays a crucial role in shaping and supporting cognitive function. Importantly, it does not matter whether a person is more proficient in sign language or spoken language—language in any modality supports the development of thinking.

The authors also emphasise that cognitive skills may be shaped by other environmental factors, such as socio-economic conditions, early interactions with parents, access to education, and the extent of a child’s engagement in communication. The findings of the paper show that functional MRI studies can detect these influences even when they are not evident behaviourally.

In the future, the researchers plan to continue studying individuals of different ages and with diverse language profiles. This work will help better understand how language, cognition, and sensory experience interact across the lifespan, and the role that early developmental conditions play in shaping these processes.

See also:

Researchers Find More Effective Approach to Revealing Majorana Zero Modes in Superconductors

An international team of researchers, including physicists from HSE MIEM, has demonstrated that nonmagnetic impurities can help more accurately reveal Majorana zero modes—quantum states considered promising building blocks for quantum computing. The researchers found that these impurities shift the energy levels that typically obscure the Majorana signal, while leaving the mode itself largely unaffected, thereby making its spectral peak more distinct. The study has been published in Research.

New Development by HSE Scientists Helps Design Reliable Electronics Faster at a Lower Cost

Scientists from HSE MIEM have developed a new approach to modelling electrothermal processes in high-power electronic circuits on printed circuit boards (PCB). The method allows engineers to quickly and accurately predict how electronic components heat up during operation, helping prevent overheating and potential failures. The results have been published in Russian Microelectronics.

The Future of Cardiogenetics Lies in Artificial Intelligence

Researchers from the AI and Digital Science Institute at the HSE Faculty of Computer Science have developed a program capable of analysing regions of the human genome that were previously inaccessible for accurate interpretation in genetic testing. The program adapts large generative AI (GenAI) models for cardiogenetics to predict how specific mutations affect the function of individual genes.

HSE Researchers: Young Russians Have Sufficient Knowledge About Money but Lack Money Management Skills

Adolescents and young adults in Russia today are well versed in financial terminology: they know what bank cards, loans, interest rates, and online payments are. However, as researchers at HSE University have found, real money-management skills remain poorly developed among most young people. The study ‘Financial Literacy, Financial Culture, and Financial Autonomy of Youth’ has been published in Monitoring of Public Opinion: Economic and Social Changes.

Why Weaker Competitors Give Up—and How to Keep Them in the Game

Anastasia Antsygina, Assistant Professor at HSE University’s Faculty of Economic Sciences, has developed a prize distribution model that maximises competitor engagement. She proposed revising the traditional ‘winner-takes-all’ approach and, in certain cases, offering a small reward even to those who have lost. According to her, this could increase participant motivation and make the competition more intense. The findings of her research were published in the Economic Theory journal.

HSE Researchers Compile Scientific Database for Studying Children’s Eating Habits

The database created at HSE University can serve as a foundation for studying children’s eating habits. This is outlined in the study ‘The Influence of Age, Gender, and Social-Role Factors on Children’s Compliance with Age-Based Nutritional Norms: An Experimental Study Using the Dish-I-Wish Web Application.’ The work has been carried out as part of the HSE Basic Research Programme and was presented at the XXVI April International Academic Conference named after Evgeny Yasin.

New Foresight Centre Study Identifies the Most Destructive Global Trends for Humankind

A team of researchers from the HSE International Research and Educational Foresight Centre has examined how global trends affect the quality of human life—from life expectancy to professional fulfilment. The findings of the study titled ‘Human Capital Transformation under the Influence of Global Trends’ were published in Foresight.

Scientists Develop Algorithm for Accurate Financial Time Series Forecasting

Researchers at the HSE Faculty of Computer Science benchmarked more than 200,000 model configurations for predicting financial asset prices and realised volatility, showing that performance can be improved by filtering out noise at specific frequencies in advance. This technique increased accuracy in 65% of cases. The authors also developed their own algorithm, which achieves accuracy comparable to that of the best models while requiring less computational power. The study has been published in Applied Soft Computing.

HSE and Yandex Propose Method to Speed Up Neural Networks for Image Generation

A team of scientists at HSE FCS and Yandex Research has proposed a method that reduces computational costs and accelerates text-to-image generation in diffusion models without compromising quality. These models currently set the standard for text-to-image generation, but their use is limited by high computational loads, the company said in a statement.

HSE Scientists Identify Effective Models for Training Research Personnel for Industry

Experts from the HSE Institute for Statistical Studies and Economics of Knowledge have examined industrial PhD programmes across 19 countries worldwide. The analysis shows that the key components of an effective model include co-funding by universities, industry, and government; dual academic supervision; and flexible intellectual property arrangements. The findings have been published in Foresight and STI Governance.