Visual Half-Field Superiority For Righthanders With Familial Sinistrality: Sex Deferences And Cognitive/Motor Interference In A Lexical Decision Task
- 1 January 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 19 (1-4) , 293-307
- https://doi.org/10.3109/00207458309148663
Abstract
By means of a lexical decision task in which words and nonwords were controlled for familiarity, the question whether sex and familial handedness influence right-field superiority for righthanded subjects was investigated. Analyses of unimanual reaction times and response accuracy revealed sex differences and a cognitive-motor interference for the male group. For hit rates the men, reacting with their right hands, showed a right-field superiority for words and a left-field superiority for meaningless syllables, and the men reacting with their left hands showed the reversed asymmetry. Theoretical problems associated with reaction time and hit rate asymmetry as indicators of language lateralisation are discussed.This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stimulus-Response Compatibility and the Motor SystemThe Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A, 1982
- Hemispheric asymmetry in lexical access and phonological encodingNeuropsychologia, 1981
- Grammatical Decision Time and Visual Hemifield StimulationCortex, 1980
- Visual field differences in verbal tasks: Effects of task familiarity and sex of subjectBrain and Language, 1978
- Aspects of language lateralization correlated with familial handednessNeuropsychologia, 1977
- Bihemispheric involvement in lexical decisions: Handedness and a possible sex differenceNeuropsychologia, 1977
- Sex differences in patterns of EEG asymmetryBiological Psychology, 1976
- The effects of handedness, family history and sex on the performance of a dichotic listening taskNeuropsychologia, 1976
- Perceptual Asymmetry in Vision Relation to Handedness, Eyedness, and Speech LateralizationCortex, 1973
- Tachistoscopic recognition, handedness, and cerebral dominanceNeuropsychologia, 1965