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Complementary Hemispheric Specialization in Monkeys

199

Citations

9

References

1988

Year

Abstract

Twenty-five split-brain monkeys were taught to discriminate two types of visual stimuli that engage lateralized cerebral processing in human subjects. Differential lateralization for the two kinds of discriminations was found; the left hemisphere was better at distinguishing between tilted lines and the right hemisphere was better at discriminating faces. These results indicate that lateralization of cognitive processing appeared in primates independently of language or handedness. In addition, cerebral lateralization in monkeys may provide an appropriate model for studying the biological basis of hemispheric specialization.

References

YearCitations

1970

480

1982

463

1970

354

1983

298

1968

218

1978

197

1984

87

1970

58

1988

19

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