Wolford G, Miller M B, Gazzaniga M
Psychology Department, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755, USA.
J Neurosci. 2000 Mar 15;20(6):RC64. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.20-06-j0003.2000.
In a probability guessing experiment, subjects try to guess which of two events will occur next. Humans tend to match the frequency of previous occurrences in their guesses. Animals other than humans tend to maximize or always choose the option that has occurred the most frequently in the past. Investigators have argued that frequency matching results from the attempt of humans to find patterns in sequences of events even when told the sequences are random. There is independent evidence that the left hemisphere of humans houses a cognitive mechanism that tries to make sense of past occurrences. We performed a probability guessing experiment with two split-brain patients and found that they approximated frequency matching in their left hemispheres and approached maximizing in their right hemispheres. We obtained a conceptual replication of that finding on patients with unilateral damage to either the left or right hemisphere. We conclude that the neural processes responsible for searching for patterns in events are housed in the left hemisphere.
在一个概率猜测实验中,受试者试图猜测接下来两个事件中哪一个会发生。人类倾向于在猜测中匹配先前出现的频率。除人类之外的动物倾向于最大化或总是选择过去出现最频繁的选项。研究人员认为,频率匹配源于人类试图在事件序列中寻找模式,即使被告知这些序列是随机的。有独立证据表明,人类的左半球存在一种认知机制,试图理解过去发生的事情。我们对两名裂脑患者进行了概率猜测实验,发现他们的左半球近似于频率匹配,而右半球则接近最大化。我们对单侧左半球或右半球受损的患者进行了该发现的概念性复制。我们得出结论,负责在事件中寻找模式的神经过程存在于左半球。