The use of laterally presented words in research into cerebral asymmetry: Is directional scanning likely to be a source of artifact?
- 30 September 1981
- journal article
- Published by Elsevier in Brain and Language
- Vol. 14 (1) , 1-14
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0093-934x(81)90060-2
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 57 references indexed in Scilit:
- Right-hemisphere language: Familial and nonfamilial sinistrals, cognitive deficits and writing hand position in sinistrals, and concrete-abstract, imageable-nonimageable dimensions in word recognition. A review of interrelated issuesBrain and Language, 1980
- A word-naming deficit in nonfamilial sinistrals? Laterality effects of vocal responses to tachistoscopically presented letter stringsNeuropsychologia, 1979
- Visual field differences in verbal tasks: Effects of task familiarity and sex of subjectBrain and Language, 1978
- Oral report of words and word approximations presented to the left or right visual fieldBrain and Language, 1977
- Serial, parallel, or holistic identification of single words in the two visual fields?Perception & Psychophysics, 1977
- Aspects of language lateralization correlated with familial handednessNeuropsychologia, 1977
- Bihemispheric involvement in lexical decisions: Handedness and a possible sex differenceNeuropsychologia, 1977
- The Perception and Identification of Mirror-Reversed PatternsThe Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1976
- Differential Recognition of Tachistoscopically Presented English and Hebrew Words in Right and Left Visual FieldsPerceptual and Motor Skills, 1965
- Tachistoscopic recognition, handedness, and cerebral dominanceNeuropsychologia, 1965