Suppr超能文献

Visual letter matching: hemispheric functioning or scanning biases?

作者信息

Fecteau Jillian H, Enns James T

机构信息

University of British Columbia, Canada.

出版信息

Neuropsychologia. 2005;43(10):1412-28. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2005.01.006. Epub 2005 Feb 25.

Abstract

Finding two mixed-case letters that share the same name is easier to do when the letters are presented in opposite visual fields than when they are both in the same field. By contrast, finding a match between two same-case letters is easier when they are in the same field. These visual field effects have been attributed to the ability of the corpus callosum to coordinate the work of the cerebral hemispheres [Banich, M. T. (1998). The missing link: The role of interhemispheric interaction in attentional processing. Brain and Cognition, 36, 128-157; Weissman, D. H., & Banich, M. T. (2000). The cerebral hemispheres cooperate to perform complex but not simple tasks. Neuropsychology, 14, 41-59]. The present study considers the alternative hypothesis that attentional scanning biases may be at work. Experiment 1 examined the effects of explicit instructions to scan items in a specific order; Experiment 2 examined influences of implicit location biasing; Experiment 3 considered the possibility that same-case letter matching is different because a perceptual grouping mechanism can be used in that task. In each experiment, we first interpreted the results within the hemispheric framework before considering the alternative accounts. We concluded that two scanning biases may be in effect: (1) an automatic bias favoring items in locations relatively distant from the current focus of attention and (2) a learned bias to scan letters in a left-to-right direction.

摘要

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验