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Original Article

Hemispheric sex differences in response to apparently moving stimuli as indicated by visual evoked potentials

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Pages 83-91 | Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

This research was designed to determine whether visual event related potentials (ERPs) recorded from over the two occipital hemispheres would indicate differential processing of apparently moving and stationary stimuli. Previous findings in the literature led us to consider a male-female comparison as part of our experimental design.

Nine male and nine female subjects were screened for right-handedness and visual abilities (acuity, depth and phoria). Each participated in three experimental sessions over a three day period in which ERPs were recorded from O1 and O2 in response to stimuli presented in left, central and right visual fields.

The main finding was that, for female subjects, right hemispheric derived ERPs were larger in amplitude than left hemisphere recordings for apparently moving stimuli presented centrally. Males showed no hemispheric amplitude differences. However, for male subjects, the left hemisphere ERP latencies to motion were longer than those recorded from over O2 with central visual field presentations. It was speculated that different attentional strategies in the two sexes led to the observed result.

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