Tj. Carbary et al., The left visual hemispace bias for the perception of chimeric faces: A further test of the difficulty of discrimination hypothesis, BRAIN COGN, 46(1-2), 2001, pp. 57-62
When people make judgments of visual-spatial fur ms, they generally perform
better if the information is presented in their left visual hemispace (LVH
), whereas for verbal material, they generally show a right visual hemispac
e (RVH) bias. For verbal material, the strength and direction of the effect
also has been linked to task difficulty, with the bias shifting toward the
RVH as task difficulty increases. Two experiments are presented that show
the reverse direction of change For a nonverbal task; that is, when a nonve
rbul task is more difficult, the usual LVH effect shifts toward an RVH bias
. Taking into account recent developments in theory and research on hemisph
eric differences in styles of information processing, we propose that task
difficulty is related more generally to changes in processing style. (C) 20
01 Academic Press.