Neuropsychological Factors Associated with Perceptual Biases for Emotional Chimeric Faces
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 45 (1-2) , 101-110
- https://doi.org/10.3109/00207458908986221
Abstract
Mechanisms underlying hemispace biases for free-field judgments of emotional intensity in chimeric faces were explored. The Levy et al. chimeric faces task (1983b) was examined in relationship to relevant neuropsychological measures (emotional, imaginal, ocular). Forty-four normal adults were administered a test battery including measures of chimeric face perception, lateral eye movements to nonemotional and emotional instructions, image generation, and ocular dominance (“eyedness”). Overall, subjects showed a significant left-sided bias for judging chimeric faces and for producing lateral eye movements to emotional instructions. Asymmetries for chimeric face perception were significantly correlated with asymmetries for the location of self-generated images in space. When task modalities were examined, there was a specific relationship between chimeric face perception and tactile processing on the other neuropsychological measures.Keywords
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