Rilea Stacy L
Department of Psychology, University of the Pacific, Stockton, CA 95211, USA.
Laterality. 2008 May;13(3):217-33. doi: 10.1080/13576500701809846.
The purpose of the current study was to investigate the influence of stimulus type and sex on strategy use and hemispheric processing during the mental rotation task. Participants included 67 right-handed men and women who completed three mental rotation tasks, all presented bilaterally. Participants rotated human stick figures, alphanumeric stimuli, and a two-dimensional (2D) meaningless object. No hemispheric differences were observed when rotating human stick figures, suggesting that men and women may rely on the same strategy. A left hemisphere advantage was observed in women when rotating alphanumeric stimuli, suggesting they may be relying on a verbal strategy, whereas no hemispheric differences were observed for men. Finally, inconsistent with predictions, no hemisphere differences were observed when rotating two-dimensional objects. The findings from the current study suggest that both the meaningfulness and the type of stimulus presented may influence strategy use differently for men and women.
本研究的目的是调查在心理旋转任务中刺激类型和性别对策略使用及半球加工的影响。参与者包括67名右利手男性和女性,他们完成了三项心理旋转任务,所有任务均双侧呈现。参与者旋转人体简笔画、字母数字刺激物和二维(2D)无意义物体。旋转人体简笔画时未观察到半球差异,这表明男性和女性可能依赖相同的策略。女性在旋转字母数字刺激物时观察到左半球优势,这表明她们可能依赖言语策略,而男性未观察到半球差异。最后,与预测不一致的是,旋转二维物体时未观察到半球差异。本研究的结果表明,呈现的刺激物的意义和类型可能对男性和女性的策略使用产生不同的影响。