General anesthesia does not erase every language-related signal at once. The better model is layered disruption: the brain may still react to sound or speech-like structure, while the processes that support meaning, sentence-level comprehension, and conscious awareness are more fragile [1][
3][
14].
That distinction matters. A measurable response to a spoken word is not the same as understanding that word, and several studies were designed specifically to separate neural speech responses from comprehension and awareness [7][
14].
The key split: sound can survive after meaning weakens
Human speech comprehension is hierarchical: the brain analyzes acoustic information before building intelligible speech and meaning across broader language systems [9]. General anesthesia appears to disturb the higher levels of that hierarchy more than the earliest sensory responses.
