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English, Michael C. W.; Maybery, Murray T.; Visser, Troy A. W. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2015
Individuals with autism spectrum conditions attend less to the left side of centrally presented face stimuli compared to neurotypical individuals, suggesting a reduction in right hemisphere activation. We examined whether a similar bias exists for non-facial stimuli in a large sample of neurotypical adults rated above- or below-average on the…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Interpersonal Competence
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Wium, A. M.; Pitout, H.; Human, A.; du Toit, P. H. – Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 2017
Three lecturers respectively in Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology, Occupational Therapy and Physiotherapy (SLPA, OT and PT) at a public Higher Education Institution in South Africa collaborated to determine thinking preferences. The Herrmann Brain Dominance Instrument (HBDI®) was used to collect data from three lecturers while an adapted…
Descriptors: Preferences, Thinking Skills, Health Services, Allied Health Occupations Education
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Kral, Andrej; Hubka, Peter; Heid, Silvia; Tillein, Jochen – Brain, 2013
Unilateral deafness has a high incidence in children. In addition to children who are born without hearing in one ear, children with bilateral deafness are frequently equipped only with one cochlear implant, leaving the other ear deaf. The present study investigates the effects of such single-sided deafness during development in the congenitally…
Descriptors: Deafness, Children, Animals, Assistive Technology
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Cao, Fan; Brennan, Christine; Booth, James R. – Developmental Science, 2015
Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we examined the process of language specialization in the brain by comparing developmental changes in two contrastive orthographies: Chinese and English. In a visual word rhyming judgment task, we found a significant interaction between age and language in left inferior parietal lobule and left…
Descriptors: Brain, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Orthographic Symbols, Phonology
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Qin, Rui; Maurits, Natasha; Maassen, Ben – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2016
In alphabetic languages, print consistently elicits enhanced, left-lateralized N170 responses in the event-related potential compared to control stimuli. In the current study, we adopted a cross-linguistic design to investigate N170 tuning to logographic Chinese and to "pinyin," an auxiliary phonetic system in Chinese. The results…
Descriptors: Chinese, Phonetics, Written Language, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
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Homae, Fumitaka; Watanabe, Hama; Taga, Gentaro – Language Learning, 2014
Infants often pay special attention to speech sounds, and they appear to detect key features of these sounds. To investigate the neural foundation of speech perception in infants, we measured cortical activation using near-infrared spectroscopy. We presented the following three types of auditory stimuli while 3-month-old infants watched a silent…
Descriptors: Infants, Speech, Auditory Perception, Intonation
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von Hecker, Ulrich; Klauer, Karl Christoph; Wolf, Lukas; Fazilat-Pour, Masoud – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2016
Memory performance in linear order reasoning tasks (A > B, B > C, C > D, etc.) shows quicker, and more accurate responses to queries on wider (AD) than narrower (AB) pairs on a hypothetical linear mental model (A -- B -- C -- D). While indicative of an analogue representation, research so far did not provide positive evidence for spatial…
Descriptors: Memory, Short Term Memory, Spatial Ability, Visual Perception
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Walter, Andrea M.; Rieger, Martina – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
The goal of an action can consist of generating a change in the environment (to produce an effect) or changing one's own situation in the environment (to move to a physical target). To investigate whether the mechanisms of effect-directed and target-directed action control are similar, participants performed continuous reversal movements. They…
Descriptors: Experiments, Correlation, Lateral Dominance, Visual Stimuli
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Christman, Stephen D. – Psychology of Music, 2013
Research shows that strong right-handedness is associated with decreased cognitive flexibility and decreased tendencies to update beliefs, arising from decreased interhemispheric interaction. In the current study, strong right-handedness was associated with decreased overall liking of less popular musical genres (with the specific genres of…
Descriptors: Music, Handedness, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Individual Differences
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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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Nagel, Bonnie J.; Herting, Megan M.; Maxwell, Emily C.; Bruno, Richard; Fair, Damien – Brain and Cognition, 2013
Adult functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) literature suggests that a left-right hemispheric dissociation may exist between verbal and spatial working memory (WM), respectively. However, investigation of this type has been obscured by incomparable verbal and spatial WM tasks and/or visual inspection at arbitrary thresholds as means to…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Short Term Memory, Diagnostic Tests
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Suavansri, Ketchai; Falchook, Adam D.; Williamson, John B.; Heilman, Kenneth M. – Brain and Cognition, 2012
Background: Pseudoneglect is a normal left sided spatial bias observed with attempted bisections of horizontal lines and a normal upward bias observed with attempted bisections of vertical lines. Horizontal pseudoneglect has been attributed to right hemispheric dominance for the allocation of attention. The goal of this study was to test the…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Handedness, Spatial Ability, Lateral Dominance
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Holmes, Kevin J.; Wolff, Phillip – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2012
Categorical perception (CP) refers to the influence of category knowledge on perception and is revealed by a superior ability to discriminate items across categories relative to items within a category. In recent years, the finding that CP is lateralized to the left hemisphere in adults has been interpreted as evidence for a kind of CP driven by…
Descriptors: Evidence, Classification, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Lateral Dominance
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Murakami, Takenobu; Restle, Julia; Ziemann, Ulf – Brain and Language, 2012
A left-hemispheric cortico-cortical network involving areas of the temporoparietal junction (Tpj) and the posterior inferior frontal gyrus (pIFG) is thought to support sensorimotor integration of speech perception into articulatory motor activation, but how this network links with the lip area of the primary motor cortex (M1) during speech…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Auditory Perception, Lateral Dominance, Sensory Integration
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Giammattei, Jeannette; Arndt, Jason – Brain and Cognition, 2012
Previous research on the lateralization of memory errors suggests that the right hemisphere's tendency to produce more memory errors than the left hemisphere reflects hemispheric differences in semantic activation. However, all prior research that has examined the lateralization of memory errors has used self-paced recognition judgments. Because…
Descriptors: Semantics, Memory, Lateral Dominance, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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