| Literature DB >> 3696913 |
R H Haude1, M Morrow-Tlucak, D M Fox, K B Pickard.
Abstract
104 men and women were tested for visual field-hemispheric transfer of spatial information on a dot-localization task. Right-handed subjects showed significant improvement when stimuli were presented to the left visual field of the right hemisphere (LVF-RH) after practice on the same task presented to the right visual field of the left hemisphere (RVF-LH) first. No improvement was found when the task was presented in the reverse order (LVF-RH first followed by RVF-LH). It was concluded that, for right-handers, transfer of spatial information to the right hemisphere is facilitated while transfer to the left hemisphere is inhibited. Left-handed subjects demonstrated no significant improvement in either condition, suggesting inhibition or lack of transfer of spatial information in either direction. No sex differences were found in either right-handed or left-handed subjects. The findings suggest that there may be different mechanisms underlying the similarities in functional lateralization of women and left-handers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1987 PMID: 3696913 DOI: 10.2466/pms.1987.65.2.423
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Percept Mot Skills ISSN: 0031-5125