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Right hemispheric dominance in processing of unconscious negative emotion.
Brain Cogn. 2006 Dec; 62(3):261-6.BC

Abstract

Right hemispheric dominance in unconscious emotional processing has been suggested, but remains controversial. This issue was investigated using the subliminal affective priming paradigm combined with unilateral visual presentation in 40 normal subjects. In either left or right visual fields, angry facial expressions, happy facial expressions, or plain gray images were briefly presented as negative, positive, and control primes, followed by a mosaic mask. Then nonsense target ideographs were presented, and the subjects evaluated their partiality toward the targets. When the stimuli were presented in the left, but not the right, visual fields, the negative primes reduced the subjects' liking for the targets, relative to the case of the positive or control primes. These results provided behavioral evidence supporting the hypothesis that the right hemisphere is dominant for unconscious negative emotional processing.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Psychology, Graduate School of Letters, Kyoto University, Yoshida-honmachi, Kyoto 606-8501, Japan. L50158@sakura.kudpc.kyoto-u.ac.jpNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Comparative Study
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

16899333

Citation

Sato, Wataru, and Satoshi Aoki. "Right Hemispheric Dominance in Processing of Unconscious Negative Emotion." Brain and Cognition, vol. 62, no. 3, 2006, pp. 261-6.
Sato W, Aoki S. Right hemispheric dominance in processing of unconscious negative emotion. Brain Cogn. 2006;62(3):261-6.
Sato, W., & Aoki, S. (2006). Right hemispheric dominance in processing of unconscious negative emotion. Brain and Cognition, 62(3), 261-6.
Sato W, Aoki S. Right Hemispheric Dominance in Processing of Unconscious Negative Emotion. Brain Cogn. 2006;62(3):261-6. PubMed PMID: 16899333.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Right hemispheric dominance in processing of unconscious negative emotion. AU - Sato,Wataru, AU - Aoki,Satoshi, Y1 - 2006/08/08/ PY - 2006/03/15/received PY - 2006/04/26/revised PY - 2006/06/24/accepted PY - 2006/8/11/pubmed PY - 2007/1/12/medline PY - 2006/8/11/entrez SP - 261 EP - 6 JF - Brain and cognition JO - Brain Cogn VL - 62 IS - 3 N2 - Right hemispheric dominance in unconscious emotional processing has been suggested, but remains controversial. This issue was investigated using the subliminal affective priming paradigm combined with unilateral visual presentation in 40 normal subjects. In either left or right visual fields, angry facial expressions, happy facial expressions, or plain gray images were briefly presented as negative, positive, and control primes, followed by a mosaic mask. Then nonsense target ideographs were presented, and the subjects evaluated their partiality toward the targets. When the stimuli were presented in the left, but not the right, visual fields, the negative primes reduced the subjects' liking for the targets, relative to the case of the positive or control primes. These results provided behavioral evidence supporting the hypothesis that the right hemisphere is dominant for unconscious negative emotional processing. SN - 0278-2626 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/16899333/Right_hemispheric_dominance_in_processing_of_unconscious_negative_emotion_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0278-2626(06)00126-6 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -