» Articles » PMID: 7714478

Abstract Visual-form Representations in the Left Cerebral Hemisphere

Overview
Specialty Psychology
Date 1995 Apr 1
PMID 7714478
Citations 27
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Visual-form systems in the cerebral hemispheres were examined in 3 experiments. After learning new types of visual forms, participants rapidly classified previously unseen prototypes of the newly learned types more efficiently when the forms were presented directly to the left hemisphere (in the right visual field) than when the forms were presented directly to the right hemisphere (in the left visual field). Neither previously seen nor previously unseen distortions of the prototypes were classified more efficiently when presented directly to the left hemisphere than when presented directly to the right hemisphere. Results indicate that an abstract visual-form system operates effectively in the left hemisphere and stores information that remains relatively invariant across the specific instances of a type of form to distinguish different types. Furthermore, this system functions relatively independently of another system that operates effectively in the right hemisphere and that stores details to distinguish specific instances of a type of form.

Citing Articles

Location- and Object-Based Representational Mechanisms Account for Bilateral Field Advantage in Multiple-Object Tracking.

Merkel C, Hopf J, Schoenfeld M eNeuro. 2024; 11(3).

PMID: 38479811 PMC: 10965235. DOI: 10.1523/ENEURO.0519-23.2024.


Stairway to memory: Left-hemispheric alpha dynamics index the progressive loading of items into a short-term store.

Wiesman A, Christopher-Hayes N, Wilson T Neuroimage. 2021; 235:118024.

PMID: 33836267 PMC: 8354033. DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118024.


Studying the integrated functional cognitive basis of sustained attention with a Primed Subjective-Illusory-Contour Attention Task.

Cowley B Sci Rep. 2018; 8(1):13514.

PMID: 30202119 PMC: 6131171. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-31876-7.


Conflicting demands of abstract and specific visual object processing resolved by frontoparietal networks.

McMenamin B, Marsolek C, Morseth B, Speer M, Burton P, Burgund E Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci. 2016; 16(3):502-15.

PMID: 26883940 PMC: 4870143. DOI: 10.3758/s13415-016-0409-4.


Separability of abstract-category and specific-exemplar visual object subsystems: evidence from fMRI pattern analysis.

McMenamin B, Deason R, Steele V, Koutstaal W, Marsolek C Brain Cogn. 2014; 93:54-63.

PMID: 25528436 PMC: 4281302. DOI: 10.1016/j.bandc.2014.11.007.