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Laterality
Asymmetries of Brain, Behaviour, and Cognition
Volume 24, 2019 - Issue 2
121
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Articles

One is all you need: intrahemispheric processing benefits nonverbal visual recognition

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Pages 139-162 | Received 26 Feb 2018, Accepted 09 Jul 2018, Published online: 19 Jul 2018
 

ABSTRACT

Several attempts have been made to understand when and how the two hemispheres of the brain work together to encode and retrieve information during memory tasks, but it remains unclear whether they are equally capable of encoding and retrieval, particularly when the stimuli do not evoke a leftward processing asymmetry. Using a divided visual field paradigm, we presented nonverbal visual stimuli to one visual field/hemisphere at encoding, and at retrieval presented the stimuli either to the same or opposite visual field/hemisphere. Recognition responses were faster and more accurate when the stimuli were initially presented at encoding and retrieval to the same hemisphere (Experiment 1), even when delay intervals between study and test were short (Experiment 2). Taken together, these findings suggest that recognition decisions for stimuli initially presented to a single hemisphere occur more quickly at shorter lags, perhaps due to a stronger memory representation in the original hemisphere of input compared to the indirectly activated hemisphere. Our results are significant because they demonstrate that each hemisphere of the brain can function to encode and retrieve memory representations equally well, as long as the stimuli contain no linguistic information.

Acknowledgments

We thank Adam Felton and David Vazquez for their insight and comments during experiment development. We also thank Merin Alvarez-Guzman, Jasmin Jahandar, Amy Moore, Divya Subramanian, and Pooya Zardoost for their assistance with data collection.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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