| Literature DB >> 30483201 |
Sergio Chieffi1, Giovanni Messina2, Ines Villano1, Antonietta Messina3, Ciro Rosario Ilardi1, Marcellino Monda3, Monica Salerno2, Francesco Sessa2, Maria Pina Mollica4, Gina Cavaliere4, Giovanna Trinchese4, Fabiano Cimmino4, Paolo Murabito5, Angela Catapano4, Vincenzo Monda3.
Abstract
Previous studies showed that healthy individuals bisect radial lines oriented along the midsagittal plane farther than the true center (distal bisection bias). It was proposed that the distal bisection bias depended on the presence of an attention bias directed toward far space (distal attention bias) and that this bias is related to the activity of the occipitotemporal visual processing stream. Other studies have also suggested that a similar distal attention bias is linked to the activity of the right hemisphere. In the present experiment we investigated whether distal bisection bias increased when radial lines were placed in the left hemispace. Furthermore, we also examined whether the bisection bias was enhanced by the use of the left hand, as left hand movements are mainly controlled by the right hemisphere. Right-handed participants were asked to bisect radial lines presented below eye level along the midsagittal plane (central lines), or laterally and parallel to the midsagittal plane, in the left or right hemispace (left and right lines, respectively). Participants used their right or left hand. The results showed that participants consistently bisected left and central radial lines farther than (i) the true center and (ii) the subjective midpoint of right radial lines. Conversely, they bisected accurately right radial lines. The hand did not influence bisection error. The present study suggests that the distal bisection bias found in the bisection of left radial lines might depend on the presence of a distal attention bias related to right hemisphere activity. The relative contribution of retinotopic and spatiotopic factors in producing the distal bisection bias is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: distal bias; hemispheric asymmetry; line bisection; radial lines; retinotopic factors; spatiotopic factors
Year: 2018 PMID: 30483201 PMCID: PMC6240617 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
FIGURE 1Placement of line bisection stimuli in relation to subject. Note that proportions of elements are not naturalistic.
FIGURE 2Line bisection errors in different line position conditions (left, center, right) for the left (dark gray) and right (light gray) hand. Mean values are shown with SE (bars).
FIGURE 3Variability of bisection errors in different line position conditions (left, center, right) for the left (dark gray) and right (light gray) hand. Mean values are shown with SE (bars).
FIGURE 4Schematic illustration of a virtual gaze plane (a) crossing the radial line in central viewing condition (LE: Left Eye; RE: Right Eye). Note that proportions of elements are not naturalistic.
FIGURE 5Schematic illustration of retinal projections in central viewing condition: the image of distal line portion (a) is projected onto the inferior retina (IR), whereas the image of proximal portion (b) is projected onto the superior retina (SR). Note that proportions of elements are not naturalistic.
FIGURE 6Schematic illustration of retinal projections in lateral (left) viewing condition: the virtual gaze plane crosses the line diagonally (c) so that the image of its distal portion (a) is projected onto the inferior left retina quadrant (ILQ), whereas the image of its proximal portion (b) is projected onto the superior right retina quadrant (SRQ) of both eyes. LE, Left Eye; RE, Right Eye. Note that proportions of elements are not naturalistic.