Literature DB >> 10921668

Absence of hemispheric dominance for mental rotation ability: a transcranial Doppler study.

C Serrati1, C Finocchi, C Calautti, G L Bruzzone, M Colucci, C Gandolfo, M Del Sette, P B Lantieri, E Favale.   

Abstract

Mean blood flow velocity (MFV) of the middle cerebral arteries was monitored in 19 healthy, adult, right-handed subjects during the resting phase and the execution of a series of neuropsychological tests: two right/left discrimination tasks, two mental rotation paradigms (the Ratcliff's test and a cube comparison test) and a phonemic fluency task, which was utilised as an internal control. In the group as a whole, the Ratcliff's test was associated with a significant bilateral increase in MFV versus both the resting state (right: p < .000001, left: p < .000001) and right/left discrimination tasks (task 1: right: p = .003, left: p = .005; task 2: right: p = .001, left: p = .001). The cube comparison in turn produced a significant increase in MFV versus both the baseline conditions (right: p < .000001, left: p < .000001) and the Ratcliff's test (right: p = .01, left: p = .002). As expected, the fluency task was associated with a significant asymmetric increase in cerebral perfusion (left > right: p = .0001). Increasing task difficulty (right/left discrimination < Ratcliffs test < cube comparison) was paralleled by a roughly proportional rise in MFV values (right: r = .424, p < .01; left: r = .331, p = .01). In conclusion, we were able to demonstrate that (1) in addition to the amount of MFV variation due to right/left discrimination (when required), mental rotation per se causes a bihemispheric activation irrespective of the experimental paradigm; (2) the MFV variation is proportional to the difficulty of the tasks.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10921668     DOI: 10.1016/s0010-9452(08)70850-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cortex        ISSN: 0010-9452            Impact factor:   4.027


  3 in total

1.  Reliability of a novel paradigm for determining hemispheric lateralization of visuospatial function.

Authors:  Andrew J O Whitehouse; Nicholas Badcock; Margriet A Groen; Dorothy V M Bishop
Journal:  J Int Neuropsychol Soc       Date:  2009-08-27       Impact factor: 2.892

2.  Stimulus rate increases lateralisation in linguistic and non-linguistic tasks measured by functional transcranial Doppler sonography.

Authors:  Heather Payne; Eva Gutierrez-Sigut; Joanna Subik; Bencie Woll; Mairéad MacSweeney
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2015-04-20       Impact factor: 3.139

3.  Is the Imitative Competence an Asymmetrically Distributed Function?

Authors:  Mara Fabri; Chiara Pierpaoli; Nicoletta Foschi; Gabriele Polonara
Journal:  Front Syst Neurosci       Date:  2021-12-24
  3 in total

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