New research in the United States claims that people can see words by birth.
According to a foreign news agency, a new brain part has been discovered in newborns in the United States that connects the brain language network and it has been named as Visual World from Area (VWFA).
According to research from Ohio State University, this part of the brain that shows words enriches the process before learning the language.
The study analyzed FMRI scans of the brains of 40 newborns less than a week old and compared the results of these tests with scans of 40 adults who were part of the project.
Some of the features of objects and faces are similar to words, but the researchers found that VWFA in newborns differs from facial recognition cortex in that it combines the functions of the brain's vocal cords.
According to researchers, VWFA specializes in seeing words before they encounter language, and it is interesting to know how and when our brains shape their functions for sensitive tasks.