In this response to multidisciplinary commentaries on the
target article, “Words in the brain's language,”
additional features of the cell-assembly model are reviewed, as
demanded by some of the commentators. Subsequently, methodological
considerations on how to perform additional tests of neurobiological
language models as well as a discussion of recent data from
neuroimaging, neuropsychological, and other behavioral studies
in speakers of spoken and sign languages follow. Special emphasis is
put on the explanatory power of the cell-assembly model regarding
neuropsychological double dissociations. Future perspectives on neural
network simulations, neuronal mechanisms of syntax and semantics,
and the interaction of attention mechanisms and cell assemblies are
pointed out in the final paragraphs.