Tutorial 4.2
Tutorial 4.2
2
LATERALIZATION, LANGUAGE AND SPLIT BRAIN
Brain is made of 2 structures: the left and the right cerebral hemispheres.
They are entirely separate except for the cerebral commissures connecting them.
Lateralization refers to difference in function between the right and left hemisphere, that
can even work independently, although they are similar in appearance.
The left and the right part exchange information through a set of axons called corpus
callosum.
Right visual field -> left half of each retina -> left hemisphere
Left visual field -> right half of each retina -> right
hemisphere
Auditory connection
Each ear sends information to both sides of the brain because any brain area that
contributes to localizing sounds must compare input from both ears.
However, each hemisphere does pay more attention to the ear of the opposite side.
-Mysers and Sperry (who received a Nobel Price Prize) experiment on split-brain cats
showed that the function of the corpus callosum is to transfer information from one
hemisphere to another.
Moreover, if the corpus callosum is cut, each hemisphere can function independently. One
hemisphere working alone can learn simple tasks as rapidly as two hemispheres working
together.
-Sperry and Gazzaniga developed a battery of tests based on the same methodological
strategy used on animals: delivering information to one hemisphere while keeping it out of
the other.
Each split-brain patient was asked to fixate on the center of a display screen; then visual
stimuli were flashed onto the left or right side of the screen for 0.1 second.
The 0.1 second was long enough for perceiving the stimuli but short enough to preclude the
confounding effects of eye movement.
The stimuli presented in the left visual field were transmitted to the right visual cortex; the
stimuli presented in the right visual field were transmitted to the left visual cortex.
Humans seem to have two independent brains, each with its own stream of
consciousness, abilities, memories, and emotions.
Unlike the animals, humans’ hemispheres are far from equal in their ability to perform in
certain tasks.
-Zaidel developed the Z lens, a contact lens that is opaque on one side and limits visual
input to one hemisphere of split-brain patients, while they scan complex visual material
such as the pages of a book. It is also used to comprehend speech.
3. Visual completion refers to the capacity to fill in gaps in visual field, as when used the
chimeric figures test where people usually could describe a completed version of the half
that had been presented to the right visual field. (The left hemisphere)
DIFFERENCES BETWEEN LEFT AND RIGHT HEMISPHERES
There are abilities that are found to be lateralized and seem to be controlled more by the
left hemisphere and others by the right one.
-The left hemisphere seems superior in controlling ipsilateral movement and plays a role in
memory for verbal material.
It is referred as interpreter, a hypothetical neuron mechanism that continuously assesses
patterns of events and tries to make sense of them.
-The right hemisphere seems superior in spatial and musical ability, but also nonverbal
material.
It is also involved in emotions as, for example, identifying faces expression of emotion
although it does not have a general dominance proved.
2. Motor theory of cerebral asymmetry holds that the left hemisphere is specialized for
the control of fine movement, of which speech is one of the categories.
3. Linguistic theory, in contrast to the other theories, assumes that the primary role of
the left hemisphere is language. (The other theories views language only as a second
specialization because the primary is analytic thought and skilled motor)