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Hemispheric Specialisation. ref. Banich, Ch 4, pp. 113-130. Examples of "popular" view.
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Hemispheric Specialisation ref. Banich, Ch 4, pp. 113-130
Examples of "popular" view • “Right-brained people This means that the right side of your brain is your dominant side. Usually this is the case with most left-handed people... Right-brained people are usually very good problem solvers and much more creative… Often they are also very visual, learning better by visual images rather than auditory instruction…” • “Left-brained people This means that the left side of your brain is dominant. Many times a left-brained person is right-handed... Although left-brained people are not quite as creative, but are much more logical or analytical than their right-brained counterparts. Many times, these individuals are better at science and math…” • “...as high as 65% of students are now right-brained, as opposed to back in the 40’s and 50’s when that percentage was left-brained.” • from http://kyky.essortment.com/amirightbrain_opr.htm
Examples of "popular" view • “Biologists figured out years ago, that the left hemisphere of the brain is the seat of most logical thought, and the right half of the brain is where most creativity occurs...” • “…In most people, the two halves of the brain have difficulty passing information back and forth. Scientists discovered this by studying head-trauma patients. In most people, the left half of the brain is jealously dominant. This, also, has been shown by studying head-trauma patients. These two principles coordinate to insure most people in our society are quite logical, and not very creative.” • from http://www.mitra.net.id/business/course/171098.htm
Examples of "popular" view • “… Betty Edwards, director of the center and author of the best selling book "Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain," insists anyone can learn to draw provided they use their right brain functions, as opposed to the left.... Edwards realized that those who could draw were using images formed in the right side of the brain and those who could not were attempting to draw from the logical left side.” • “… Edwards’ first step in teaching students to draw from the right side of the brain begins by having students recreate a picture while the picture is upside down..” • from http://www.acs.csulb.edu/~d49er/Issue28/28nbrain.html
Hemispheric Specialisation: Methods of Studying • Individuals with unilateral lesions • WADA Technique • "Split Brain" patients • Lateralised presentation (e.g. visual half-field technique)
1. Individuals with Unilateral Lesions • Compare effects of damage to RH and LH Does damage result in different types of impairments in each case?
Left hemisphere damage • Bill Reiger had been a rising star in high school - academically talented and a top athlete. But then his mother died unexpectedly. Confused by her death, he turned down a scholarship to college and joined the army. During a combat mission in Vietnam, he was hit by shrapnel that damaged the left hemisphere of his brain. When asked to tell his story, he said: • "My mother died...uh... me... uh fi'tenn. Uh, oh, I guess six month... my mother pass away. An'uh... an'en,,, un... ah... seventeen... seventeen... go... uh High School. An uh... Christmas... well, uh, I uh... Pitt'burgh." • Goodglass 1976, p.239
Right hemisphere damage • Thirty years ago, Lincoln Holmes was in a car accident that rendered him completely "face blind". "In those moments when I am suddenly alone, and I don't know where anybody that I am with is, there can be a surge of fear, and it is lonely in that sense" When shown a series of slides of inanimate objects, he is able to identify them correctly - but finds it completely impossible to recognise a picture of Marilyn Monroe. Even when shown a picture of himself, he has to be prompted before he realises he is staring at his own image. "For me it is a face, it is not my face, and there is some sense of incompleteness there. So be it." "When I am asked by people, 'do faces all look the same?', the answer to that question is 'no' - they don't all look the same, but none of them look like anyone." • Adapted from the BBC TV programme "Brain Story"
Right hemisphere damage Poor on visuospatial tasks e.g. Block design
Other findings Arithmetic Melody (“amusica”) Complex movements e.g. opening can Intonation
Limitations • - Can’t compare R/L hemispheres in same person • - Can’t get data on small sub-samples (e.g. left-handers)
Hemispheric Specialisation: Methods of Studying • Individuals with unilateral lesions • WADA Technique • "Split Brain" patients • Lateralised presentation (e.g. visual half-field technique)
2. The WADA Technique • Sodium Amytal injected into carotid artery • Anaesthetises one hemisphere • Creates temporary unilateral "lesion"
The WADA Technique (cont) • can compare hemispheres in same person • good for studying "unusual" subgroups • Example: Language localisation in r. and l. handers
Hemispheric Specialisation: Methods of Studying • Individuals with unilateral lesions • WADA Technique • "Split Brain" patients • Lateralised presentation (e.g. visual half-field technique)
3. Split Brain Patients • Corpus callosum is cut • LH/RH intact, but don't communicate
The Split Brain Syndrome • Patients who have undergone this procedure recover to perform at a normal intellectual and social level. In fact, they may be totally unaware of having a deficit. One patient, WJ, was described as "living happily in Downey, California, with no sense of the enormity of the findings or for that matter any awareness that he had changed." • Nevertheless, these patients have some unusual traits…. They sometimes give evidence of having two differing minds. For example, one patient found his left hand struggling against his right hand when trying to pull up his pants in the morning. While the right hand tried to pull them up, the left was trying to pull them down. On another occasion, he was angry with his wife and attacked her with his left hand while simultaneously trying to protect her with his right! • From Gazzaniga et al (1998) Cognitive Neuroscience
Split Brain Studies • Present stimulus to one hemisphere only: If ball presented on left side of screen: Could P name the item? No Could he pick the right object? Yes Which hand could he use? Left right or both? Left only Stimulus processed by ______ hemisphere left
Split Brain Studies (cont.) E: “What was it?” “What goes on it?" P: “I don't know." E: “Can you draw it?”
Split Brain Studies (cont.) Can demonstrate asymmetries in other domains:
Other findings • LH can produce and understand all words, even the most complex sentences • RH can’t produce speech, but understands some concrete words, simple sentences • BUT Beware: split-brain P's may have different brains premorbidly Language Tasks:
Hemispheric Specialisation: Methods of Studying • Individuals with unilateral lesions • WADA Technique • "Split Brain" patients • Lateralised presentation (e.g. visual half-field technique)
4. Lateralised Presentation in Normals • Hemispheres communicate • BUT first hemisphere to process has advantage (e.g. accuracy, RT) • Example: Visual half-field technique + CAT Presentation is brief (< 200msec). Why?
Lateralised Presentation (cont.) • Applications: • word recognition tasks e.g. lexical decision • face processing e.g. same-different matching Can use in other modalities e.g. dichotic listening • RH advantage for music • LH advantage for words
Lateralised Presentation (cont.) Advantages: • normals, no pre-existing conditions • can be performed anywhere, anytime Drawbacks: • what do the RT differences actually mean?
Theories of Hemispheric Specialisation • Type of Material: verbal vs. visual • Nature of Processing: analytical vs. holistic
Analytical vs. Holistic theory: Evidence • 1. Split-brain studies: visual matching tasks Match by visual similarity = RH advantage Match by function = LH advantage Target picture
Analytical vs. Holistic theory: Evidence • 2. Normals: • Discrimination of grossly diff. faces = RH • Discrim. of faces differing by one feature = LH
Analytical vs. Holistic theory: Evidence • 3. Patients with unilateral brain damage "Hierarchical" stimuli: LH damage (relies on RH) RH damage (relies on LH)
Alternative models • Kosslyn: language-driven specialisation: • * Language specialisation is cause of asymmetries • * Other asymmetries reflect categorical nature of language • Dangers of "dichotomies" -> circularity