“…Broca’s area (left inferior frontal gyrus (lIFG)/BA 44/45) has been implicated in various language-related tasks via a variety of neuroimaging techniques. To name a few, fMRI has indicated that the lIFG plays a role in phonetic encoding (Papoutsi et al, 2009); MEG/fMRI has shown stronger activation of Broca’s area during verb generation (Pang, Wang, Malone, Kadis, & Donner, 2011); electrocorticography has revealed a cortical network for speech planning that includes Broca’s area (Castellucci, Kovach, Howard, Greenlee, & Long, 2022), and fNIRS has shown that bilingual interpretation relies on functional connectivity between Broca’s area and Wernicke’s area (He & Hu, 2022). While these studies offer strong correlational evidence, they are, by nature, correlation studies.…”