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Hemispheric specialization or reading habits: evidence from lexical decision research with Hebrew words and sentences.
Brain Lang. 1993 Apr; 44(3):254-63.BL

Abstract

This paper reports the results of a lexical decision-visual hemifield protocol using Hebrew words and nonwords. The lexical decision task was combined with sentence priming to examine the impact of hemispheric specialization and sentence length. The data are relevant to the Kirsner and Schwartz (1986) hypothesis that reading habits can explain the oft-reported right visual field (RVF) superiority in linguistic tasks. Both the target stimuli and the sentence primes were in Hebrew and 26 male right-handed native Hebrew speakers served as subjects. Hebrew is written and read from right to left. Therefore, according to the favorable foveal viewing explanation (Kirsner & Schwartz, 1986), there should have been no RVF superiority. The results indicated, however, highly significant RVF superiority. Furthermore, priming sentences, written in Hebrew, should direct the attention of the subject to the left visual field in expectation of the appearance of a target word. Nevertheless, the RVF superiority was even more significant when target stimuli were preceded by priming sentences. Both results indicated that reading habits and directed reading attention cannot explain RVF superiority in lexical decision.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Psychology, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

8513403

Citation

Faust, M, et al. "Hemispheric Specialization or Reading Habits: Evidence From Lexical Decision Research With Hebrew Words and Sentences." Brain and Language, vol. 44, no. 3, 1993, pp. 254-63.
Faust M, Kravetz S, Babkoff H. Hemispheric specialization or reading habits: evidence from lexical decision research with Hebrew words and sentences. Brain Lang. 1993;44(3):254-63.
Faust, M., Kravetz, S., & Babkoff, H. (1993). Hemispheric specialization or reading habits: evidence from lexical decision research with Hebrew words and sentences. Brain and Language, 44(3), 254-63.
Faust M, Kravetz S, Babkoff H. Hemispheric Specialization or Reading Habits: Evidence From Lexical Decision Research With Hebrew Words and Sentences. Brain Lang. 1993;44(3):254-63. PubMed PMID: 8513403.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Hemispheric specialization or reading habits: evidence from lexical decision research with Hebrew words and sentences. AU - Faust,M, AU - Kravetz,S, AU - Babkoff,H, PY - 1993/4/1/pubmed PY - 1993/4/1/medline PY - 1993/4/1/entrez SP - 254 EP - 63 JF - Brain and language JO - Brain Lang VL - 44 IS - 3 N2 - This paper reports the results of a lexical decision-visual hemifield protocol using Hebrew words and nonwords. The lexical decision task was combined with sentence priming to examine the impact of hemispheric specialization and sentence length. The data are relevant to the Kirsner and Schwartz (1986) hypothesis that reading habits can explain the oft-reported right visual field (RVF) superiority in linguistic tasks. Both the target stimuli and the sentence primes were in Hebrew and 26 male right-handed native Hebrew speakers served as subjects. Hebrew is written and read from right to left. Therefore, according to the favorable foveal viewing explanation (Kirsner & Schwartz, 1986), there should have been no RVF superiority. The results indicated, however, highly significant RVF superiority. Furthermore, priming sentences, written in Hebrew, should direct the attention of the subject to the left visual field in expectation of the appearance of a target word. Nevertheless, the RVF superiority was even more significant when target stimuli were preceded by priming sentences. Both results indicated that reading habits and directed reading attention cannot explain RVF superiority in lexical decision. SN - 0093-934X UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/8513403/Hemispheric_specialization_or_reading_habits:_evidence_from_lexical_decision_research_with_Hebrew_words_and_sentences_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0093-934X(83)71017-5 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -