LATERAL PREFERENCES AND VISUAL-FIELD ASYMMETRIES - APPEARANCES MAY HAVE BEEN OVERSTATED

Authors
Citation
M. Brysbaert, LATERAL PREFERENCES AND VISUAL-FIELD ASYMMETRIES - APPEARANCES MAY HAVE BEEN OVERSTATED, Cortex, 30(3), 1994, pp. 413-429
Citations number
52
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences,"Behavioral Sciences
Journal title
CortexACNP
ISSN journal
00109452
Volume
30
Issue
3
Year of publication
1994
Pages
413 - 429
Database
ISI
SICI code
0010-9452(1994)30:3<413:LPAVA->2.0.ZU;2-Z
Abstract
A review of a sample of the literature on differences in visual half f ield (VHF) asymmetries between left- and right-handed subjects, showed that hand preference only had a small influence on VHF superiorities. Across studies, the effect usually was in the expected direction, but within studies, it rarely reached significance. The finding was repli cated in two new empirical studies, one with a task that yielded a rig ht VHF superiority (word naming), and one with a task that returned a left VHF superiority (symmetry detection). A comparison with other lat eral preferences (footedness, earedness, and eyedness) indicated that the VHF asymmetry of the word naming task was better predicted by ear preference than by hand preference; no such superiority was found for the symmetry detection task, where no lateral preference correlated si gnificantly with the VHF asymmetry.