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Original Articles

Gender Differences in Lateralized Semantic Priming

, , , , &
Pages 381-392 | Received 08 Mar 2008, Accepted 09 Dec 2008, Published online: 09 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Previous literature suggests that women evidence more bilateral cerebral organization, particularly in language processing, whereas men show greater left hemisphere dominance for language. This study examined the magnitude of these gender differences in a lateralized lexical decision task and the implications of such differences to semantic processing and cerebral organization. As predicted, women, as compared to men, recruited greater bilateral hemispheric resources, as evidenced by greater contralateral hemispheric priming. Spatial skills predicted less priming in women, but not in men. Implications for laterality research in aging populations as well as future directions are discussed.

Notes

*p< .05

**p < .001.

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