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Intrahemispheric response competition between vocal and unimanual performance in normal adult human males.
179
Citations
39
References
1975
Year
PsychoacousticsSpeech KinematicsNeurolinguisticsPsycholinguisticsSpeech SciencePsychologyPhoneticsDowel RodIntrahemispheric Response CompetitionSpeech Motor ControlLanguage StudiesHealth SciencesBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceBehavioral NeuroscienceSpeech ProductionConcurrent VerbalizationUnimanual PerformanceSpeech CommunicationVoiceRight Index FingerSpeech PerceptionLinguistics
Subjects balanced a dowel rod vertically on the left and right index finger singly and while simultaneously repeating phrases. With right-handed subjects who had no left-handed relatives, concurrent verbalization shortened right- but not left-handed balancing. Increased phonetic difficulty of the phrases produced an increased decrement on right-handed balancing, but left-handed balancing was unchanged; it also produced more verbalization errors on trials with the right hand, but not with the left. Concurrent verbalization shortened balancing duration with both hands of left-handers. Right-handers with left-handed relatives produced variable results. Concurrent humming also selectively interfered with right-handed balancing. It was concluded that the results conform to an interpretation based on intrahemispheric interference between incompatible, simultaneously produced sets of responses.
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