Minagawa N, Kashu K
Department of Psychology, School of Humanities, Kwansei Gakuin University, Nishinomiya, Japan.
Percept Mot Skills. 1989 Jun;68(3 Pt 2):1031-9. doi: 10.2466/pms.1989.68.3c.1031.
16 adult subjects performed a tactile recognition task. According to our 1984 study, half of the subjects were classified as having a left hemispheric preference for the processing of visual stimuli, while the other half were classified as having a right hemispheric preference for the processing of visual stimuli. The present task was conducted according to the S1-S2 matching paradigm. The standard stimulus was a readily recognizable object and was presented tactually to either the left or right hand of each subject. The comparison stimulus was an object-picture and was presented visually by slide in a tachistoscope. The interstimulus interval was .05 sec. or 2.5 sec. Analysis indicated that the left-preference group showed right-hand superiority, and the right-preference group showed left-hand superiority. The notion of individual hemisphericity was supported in tactile processing.