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Suegami, Takashi; Laeng, Bruno – Brain and Cognition, 2013
It has been shown that the left and right cerebral hemispheres (LH and RH) respectively process qualitative or "categorical" spatial relations and metric or "coordinate" spatial relations. However, categorical spatial information could be thought as divided into two types: semantically-coded and visuospatially-coded categorical information. We…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Semantics, Stimuli, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Marotta, Andrea; Lupianez, Juan; Casagrande, Maria – Brain and Cognition, 2012
Recent studies have demonstrated that central cues, such as eyes and arrows, reflexively trigger attentional shifts. However, it is not clear whether the attentional mechanisms induced by these two cues are similar or rather differ in some important way. We investigated hemispheric lateralization of the orienting effects induced by the two cue…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Cues, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Lateral Dominance
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Harris, Chris D.; Lindell, Annukka K. – Brain and Cognition, 2011
People with autism show attenuated cerebral lateralisation for emotion processing. Given growing appreciation of the notion that autism represents a continuum, the present study aimed to determine whether atypical hemispheric lateralisation is evident in people with normal but above average levels of autism-like traits. One hundred and…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cues, Autism, Psychological Patterns
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Belanger, Nathalie; Baum, Shari R.; Titone, Debra – Brain and Language, 2009
The neural bases of prosody during the production of literal and idiomatic interpretations of literally plausible idioms was investigated. Left- and right-hemisphere-damaged participants and normal controls produced literal and idiomatic versions of idioms ("He hit the books.") All groups modulated duration to distinguish the interpretations. LHD…
Descriptors: Sentences, Cues, Patients, Bilingualism
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Rossi, Sonja; Jurgenson, Ina B.; Hanulikova, Adriana; Telkemeyer, Silke; Wartenburger, Isabell; Obrig, Hellmuth – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2011
Spoken word recognition is achieved via competition between activated lexical candidates that match the incoming speech input. The competition is modulated by prelexical cues that are important for segmenting the auditory speech stream into linguistic units. One such prelexical cue that listeners rely on in spoken word recognition is phonotactics.…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cues, Phonemes
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Stafford, Lorenzo D.; Brandaro, Nicola – Brain and Cognition, 2010
Recent research has looked at whether the expectancy of an emotion can account for subsequent valence specific laterality effects of prosodic emotion, though no research has examined this effect for facial emotion. In the study here (n = 58), we investigated this issue using two tasks; an emotional face perception task and a novel word task that…
Descriptors: Lateral Dominance, Role, Gender Differences, Emotional Response
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Evans, Karen M.; Federmeier, Kara D. – Neuropsychologia, 2009
Hemispheric differences in the use of memory retrieval cues were examined in a continuous recognition design, using visual half-field presentation to bias the processing of test words. A speeded recognition task revealed general accuracy and response time advantages for items whose test presentation was biased to the left hemisphere. A second…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cues, Diagnostic Tests, Reaction Time
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Shah, Amee P.; Baum, Shari R.; Dwivedi, Veena D. – Brain and Language, 2006
The present investigation focussed on the neural substrates underlying linguistic distinctions that are signalled by prosodic cues. A production experiment was conducted to examine the ability of left- (LHD) and right- (RHD) hemisphere-damaged patients and normal controls to use temporal and fundamental frequency cues to disambiguate sentences…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Cues, Sentence Structure, Suprasegmentals