“…Similar to adults, temporal and frontal areas of the brain are activated in very young infants in response to spoken language, but not to non-linguistic signals such as scrambled speech, sine-wave contours, tones, monkey calls, and backwards speech (Dehaene-Lambertz, Dehaene, & Hertz-Pannier, 2002;Minagawa-Kawai et al, 2011;Peña et al, 2003;Perani et al, 2011;Shultz, Vouloumanos, Bennett, & Pelphrey, 2014;Taga, Homae, & Watanabe, 2007). In many (Dehaene-Lambertz et al, 2002;Minagawa-Kawai et al, 2011;Peña et al, 2003;Sato et al, 2012;Shultz et al, 2014;Vannasing et al, 2016), but not all (May, Byers-Heinlein, Gervain, & Werker, 2011;Perani et al, 2011;Taga, Homae, & Watanabe, 2007) studies, these effects are most pronounced in the left hemisphere. It is unknown, however, whether neural specialization for language in neonates is restricted to speech.…”