Peterzell D H
Department of Psychology, University of Colorado, Boulder 80309.
Brain Cogn. 1991 Jan;15(1):62-8. doi: 10.1016/0278-2626(91)90015-z.
The hypothesis that the two cerebral hemispheres are specialized for processing different visual spatial frequencies is discussed in reference to Christman's (1989) review. It is suggested that the relevant results from every study reviewed by Christman which support the hypothesis can also be explained in terms of the total amount of visible information or energy contained in a visual stimulus, and the right hemisphere's relative resistance to information degradation. A recent study provides evidence in support of this total visible information/energy hypothesis, and appropriate measures of information/energy are discussed. Furthermore, results from the studies reviewed may reflect response bias and not hemispheric specialization or competence. The few studies which examine response bias support such an interpretation.
关于两个大脑半球专门用于处理不同视觉空间频率的假说,在参考克里斯曼(1989年)的综述时进行了讨论。有人提出,克里斯曼综述的每项支持该假说的研究的相关结果,也可以根据视觉刺激中包含的可见信息或能量的总量,以及右半球对信息降解的相对抗性来解释。最近的一项研究提供了支持这一总可见信息/能量假说的证据,并讨论了信息/能量的适当测量方法。此外,所综述研究的结果可能反映的是反应偏差,而非半球专门化或能力。少数检验反应偏差的研究支持这种解释。