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Split-brain patients: Visual biases for faces

Chapter
Publication Date:
2018
abstract:
Split-brain patients constitute a small subpopulation of epileptic patients who have received the surgical resection of the callosal fibers in an attempt to reduce the spread of epileptic foci between the cerebral hemispheres. The study of callosotomy patients allowed neuropsychologists
to investigate the effects of the hemispheric disconnection, shedding more light on the perceptual and cognitive abilities of each hemisphere in isolation. This view that callosotomy completely isolates the hemispheres has now been revised, in favor of the idea of a dynamic functional reorganization of the two sides of the brain; however, the evidence collected from split-brain patients is still a milestone in the neurosciences. The right-hemispheric superiority found in the healthy population concerning face perception has been further supported with
split-brains, and it has been shown that the right disconnected hemisphere appears superior to the left hemisphere in recognizing and processing faces with similar characteristics as the observers’ (e.g., gender, identity, etc.). Even more controversial is the field of hemispheric
asymmetries for processing facial emotion, some evidence suggesting a right-hemispheric superiority for all emotions, some others showing a complementary hemispheric asymmetry depending on the positive or negative emotional valence. Although the practice of callosotomy
is mostly abandoned today in favor of pharmacological alternatives, further studies on the remaining split-brain patients could help advance our understanding of hemispheric specialization for social stimuli.
Iris type:
2.1 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
Keywords:
Split-brain patientsFace perceptionHemispheric asymmetrySocial cognitionVisual processing
List of contributors:
Prete, Giulia; Tommasi, Luca
Authors of the University:
PRETE GIULIA
TOMMASI Luca
Handle:
https://ricerca.unich.it/handle/11564/696861
Book title:
Cerebral Lateralization and Cognition: Evolutionary and Developmental Investigations of Behavioral Biases
Published in:
PROGRESS IN BRAIN RESEARCH
Series
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