Literature DB >> 24041316

Split-brain, the right hemisphere, and art: fact and fiction.

Dahlia W Zaidel1.   

Abstract

The research studies of complete commissurotomy patients (split-brain) in Roger W. Sperry's psychobiology laboratory at Caltech, Pasadena, galvanized the scientific and intellectual world in the 1960s and 1970s. The findings had an important and enduring impact on brain research in countless areas. Interest in hemispheric specialization in particular was sparked by these studies and paved the way for countless discoveries. Right hemisphere specialization for visuospatial functions and facial processing was confirmed with these patients. The further unraveling of right-hemisphere cognition, the "mute" hemisphere, was a major goal in Sperry's laboratory, and much factual knowledge was learned that was not known previously. However, the linking of art and creativity with the right hemisphere was a nonempirically based inference made not by Sperry's lab but rather by others wishing to "assign" functional hemisphericity. The general assumption was that "art" is anchored in spatial cognition, that it is a nonverbal activity requiring imagery and thus must be controlled by the right, nonlanguage hemisphere. To this day, robust evidence that the right specializes in art expression or art perception is yet to be shown, if for no other reason than that art is not a single, unitary form of expression or cognition. The conjectured right hemisphere-art link turned into a popular story that filtered back into science, shaped future research of brain and art, and overlooked other avenues for insights. This chapter traces and explores this background.
© 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Roger Sperry; art and brain; complete commissurotomy; corpus callosum and art; imagery and brain; left hemisphere; nonverbal cognition

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24041316     DOI: 10.1016/B978-0-444-63287-6.00001-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Prog Brain Res        ISSN: 0079-6123            Impact factor:   2.453


  7 in total

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Review 6.  What Do Spatial Distortions in Patients' Drawing After Right Brain Damage Teach Us About Space Representation in Art?

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Review 7.  Creativity, brain, and art: biological and neurological considerations.

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  7 in total

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