Department of Psychology, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland 1164, New Zealand.
Neuropsychologia. 2010 May;48(6):1664-9. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2010.02.011. Epub 2010 Feb 16.
Two callosotomized patients and 24 neurologically normal subjects performed simple binary discriminations between upright letters flashed in one or other visual field. Where discrimination of the letters F and R by name either showed a left-hemisphere advantage or no hemispheric effect, discrimination of whether the same letters were normal or backward showed a right-hemisphere advantage. These results suggest that discrimination of mirror-image letters depends on matching to an exemplar, for which the right-hemisphere is dominant, while letter naming depends on abstract category recognition. One commissurotomized patient, DDV, showed systematic left-right reversal of the letters in the left visual field, classifying the normal letters as reversed and reversed ones as normal, and persisted with this reversal when the letters were shown in free vision. This suggests that reversed exemplars of the letters may be laid down the right cerebral hemisphere. There was no such reversal in the other patient (DDC).
两名胼胝体切开患者和 24 名神经正常的受试者在一个或另一个视野中简单地对直立字母进行二进制辨别。当通过名称辨别字母 F 和 R 时,要么表现出左半球优势,要么没有半球效应,而辨别相同字母是正常的还是反向的则表现出右半球优势。这些结果表明,镜像字母的辨别取决于与范例的匹配,而右半球占主导地位,而字母命名则取决于抽象类别识别。一名胼胝体切开患者(DDV)在左视野中表现出字母的系统左右反转,将正常字母分类为反转,将反转字母分类为正常,并在字母自由呈现时保持这种反转。这表明,字母的反转范例可能存储在右大脑半球中。另一名患者(DDC)没有出现这种反转。