Kirsner K, Schwartz S
Brain Cogn. 1986 Jul;5(3):354-61. doi: 10.1016/0278-2626(86)90036-9.
A common technique in research into cerebral asymmetry in both normal and clinical populations involves the use of lateralized visual displays. The validity of this approach depends on several generally implicit assumptions about the character of the cognitive processes involved. For example, when words are used as stimuli, cognitive processing is assumed to involve either "whole-word" or "ends-in" analysis. In this way, both hemispheres are assumed to have equal opportunities to recognize the word. These assumptions are critical, because if they are wrong, explanations based on established perceptual principles may provide a sufficient and more parsimonious explanation for hemifield asymmetries than hemispheric specialization theories. This point is developed and illustrated with particular reference to word recognition and classification. From a purely perceptual viewpoint, the right visual field advantage observed in tasks using word stimuli is to be expected given the presence of systematic biases in favor of initial characters or features of words and the relationship between retinal eccentricity and visual acuity. In other words, there is no need nor justification for a hemispheric account of visual field differences in such tasks. Some of the limiting conditions and theoretical implications of this argument are identified and discussed.
在对正常人群和临床人群的大脑不对称性研究中,一种常用的技术涉及使用单侧视觉显示。这种方法的有效性取决于几个关于所涉及认知过程特征的通常隐含的假设。例如,当使用单词作为刺激时,认知加工被假定涉及“整词”或“词尾”分析。通过这种方式,假定两个半球都有平等的机会识别单词。这些假设至关重要,因为如果它们是错误的,基于既定感知原则的解释可能会比半球特化理论为半视野不对称提供一个充分且更简洁的解释。这一点将结合单词识别和分类进行阐述和说明。从纯粹的感知角度来看,鉴于存在有利于单词初始字符或特征的系统偏差以及视网膜离心率与视敏度之间的关系,在使用单词刺激的任务中观察到的右视野优势是可以预期的。换句话说,在这类任务中,无需也没有理由用半球来解释视野差异。本文将确定并讨论这一论点的一些限制条件和理论含义。