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Examining lateralized semantic access using pictures.
Brain Cogn. 2010 Mar; 72(2):202-9.BC

Abstract

A divided visual field (DVF) experiment examined the semantic processing strategies employed by the cerebral hemispheres to determine if strategies observed with written word stimuli generalize to other media for communicating semantic information. We employed picture stimuli and vary the degree of semantic relatedness between the picture pairs. Participants made an on-line semantic relatedness judgment in response to sequentially presented pictures. We found that when pictures are presented to the right hemisphere responses are generally more accurate than the left hemisphere for semantic relatedness judgments for picture pairs. Furthermore, consistent with earlier DVF studies employing words, we conclude that the RH is better at accessing or maintaining access to information that has a weak or more remote semantic relationship. We also found evidence of faster access for pictures presented to the LH in the strongly-related condition. Overall, these results are consistent with earlier DVF word studies that argue that the cerebral hemispheres each play an important and separable role during semantic retrieval.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Psychology, McGill University, Montreal Quebec, Canada.No affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

19846248

Citation

Lovseth, Kyle, and Ruth Ann Atchley. "Examining Lateralized Semantic Access Using Pictures." Brain and Cognition, vol. 72, no. 2, 2010, pp. 202-9.
Lovseth K, Atchley RA. Examining lateralized semantic access using pictures. Brain Cogn. 2010;72(2):202-9.
Lovseth, K., & Atchley, R. A. (2010). Examining lateralized semantic access using pictures. Brain and Cognition, 72(2), 202-9. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bandc.2009.08.016
Lovseth K, Atchley RA. Examining Lateralized Semantic Access Using Pictures. Brain Cogn. 2010;72(2):202-9. PubMed PMID: 19846248.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Examining lateralized semantic access using pictures. AU - Lovseth,Kyle, AU - Atchley,Ruth Ann, Y1 - 2009/10/20/ PY - 2008/11/17/received PY - 2009/08/25/revised PY - 2009/08/25/accepted PY - 2009/10/23/entrez PY - 2009/10/23/pubmed PY - 2010/4/22/medline SP - 202 EP - 9 JF - Brain and cognition JO - Brain Cogn VL - 72 IS - 2 N2 - A divided visual field (DVF) experiment examined the semantic processing strategies employed by the cerebral hemispheres to determine if strategies observed with written word stimuli generalize to other media for communicating semantic information. We employed picture stimuli and vary the degree of semantic relatedness between the picture pairs. Participants made an on-line semantic relatedness judgment in response to sequentially presented pictures. We found that when pictures are presented to the right hemisphere responses are generally more accurate than the left hemisphere for semantic relatedness judgments for picture pairs. Furthermore, consistent with earlier DVF studies employing words, we conclude that the RH is better at accessing or maintaining access to information that has a weak or more remote semantic relationship. We also found evidence of faster access for pictures presented to the LH in the strongly-related condition. Overall, these results are consistent with earlier DVF word studies that argue that the cerebral hemispheres each play an important and separable role during semantic retrieval. SN - 1090-2147 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/19846248/Examining_lateralized_semantic_access_using_pictures_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0278-2626(09)00170-5 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -