Simons Center for the Social Brain
  • Our Research
    • Impact
      • Reaching beyond MIT
    • Targeted Projects
    • Postdoctoral Fellowship Research
    • Seed Grants
    • Technology Hubs
  • Our People
    • Investigators
    • Postdoctoral Fellows
      • Postdoctoral Fellows
      • Simons Postdoctoral Fellows: In their own words
    • Simons Center MSRP Summer students
  • Apply For Funding
    • Targeted Project Funding
    • Postdoctoral Fellowship Funding
  • Events
    • SCSB Events Overview
    • Colloquium Series
    • Lunch Series
    • UnrulyArt Program
    • Special Events
    • Past Events
      • Past Colloquium Series Speakers
      • Past Lunch Series Speakers
      • Past Special Events
  • News
    • SCSB Newsletters
  • Our Values
  • Support Us
    • Support Our Research
    • Participate in Research
  • Contact Us

Home

»

News

»

SCSB News

»

Evelina Fedorenko receives Troland Award from National Academy of Sciences
Evelina Fedorenko receives Troland Award from National Academy of Sciences

Evelina Fedorenko receives Troland Award from National Academy of Sciences

Source: McGovern News | Julie Pryor, January 23, 2025]

McGovern Investigator Evelina Fedorenko. Photo: Alexandra Sokhina


The National Academy of Sciences (NAS) announced today that McGovern Investigator Evelina Fedorenko will receive a 2025 Troland Research Award for her groundbreaking contributions towards understanding the language network in the human brain.

The Troland Research Award is given annually to recognize unusual achievement by early-career researchers within the broad spectrum of experimental psychology.

Two women and one child looking at a computer screen.
McGovern Investigator Ev Fedorenko (center) looks at a young subject’s brain scan in the Martinos Imaging Center at MIT. Photo: Alexandra Sokhina

Fedorenko, who is an associate professor of brain and cognitive sciences at MIT, is interested in how minds and brains create language. Her lab is unpacking the internal architecture of the brain’s language system and exploring the relationship between language and various cognitive, perceptual, and motor systems.  Her novel methods combine precise measures of an individual’s brain organization with innovative computational modeling to make fundamental discoveries about the computations that underlie the uniquely human ability for language.

Fedorenko has shown that the language network is selective for language processing over diverse non-linguistic processes that have been argued to share computational demands with language, such as math, music, and social reasoning. Her work has also demonstrated that syntactic processing is not localized to a particular region within the language network, and every brain region that responds to syntactic processing is at least as sensitive to word meanings.

She has also shown that representations from neural network language models, such as ChatGPT, are similar to those in the human language brain areas. Fedorenko also highlighted that although language models can master linguistic rules and patterns, they are less effective at using language in real-world situations. In the human brain, that kind of functional competence is distinct from formal language competence, she says, requiring not just language-processing circuits but also brain areas that store knowledge of the world, reason, and interpret social interactions. Contrary to a prominent view that language is essential for thinking, Fedorenko argues that language is not the medium of thought and is primarily a tool for communication.

A probabilistic atlas of the human language network based on >800 individuals (center) and sample individual language networks, which illustrate inter-individual variability in the precise locations and shapes of the language areas. Image: Ev Fedorenko

Ultimately, Fedorenko’s cutting-edge work is uncovering the computations and representations that fuel language processing in the brain. She will receive the Troland Award this April, during the annual meeting of the NAS in Washington DC.

Original Article
SCSB_Newsletter_Fall-2025_cover

Contact Us:

Simons Center for the Social Brain
43 Vassar Street
MIT Building 46, Room 6237
Cambridge, MA 02139
Accessibility

· © 2025 Simons Center for the Social Brain · ·

keyboard_arrow_up