On the representation of language in the right hemisphere of right-handed people. |
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Authors: | M Moscovitch |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, Erindale College, University of Toronto Canada |
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Abstract: | Laterality experiments using reaction time were conducted to assess the performance of the right hemisphere of normal people on verbal tasks. The results show that if the task calls for pictorial encoding of visually presented verbal material, then the right hemisphere's performance is superior to that of the left. When the task calls for linguistic analysis, the minor hemisphere displays no aptitude in dealing with the task. The latter finding is at variance with data from split-brain research. To reconcile these differences, it was proposed that language functions, though represented in the right hemisphere of normal people, are functionally localized in the left. When the control which the left hemisphere exerts over the right is weakened or removed, e.g., by commissurotomy, right hemisphere language is released. The application of this model to other neurological phenomena is briefly discussed. |
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Keywords: | Requests for reprints should be sent to Morris Moscovitch Psychology Department Erindale College University of Toronto Clarkson Ontario Canada M5P 1P8. |
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