2012
DOI: 10.1080/1357650x.2011.615125
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Do left and right asymmetries of hemispheric preference interact with attention to predict local and global performance in applied tasks?

Abstract: Many cognitive neuroscience studies show that the ability to attend to and identify global or local information is lateralised between the two hemispheres in the human brain; the left hemisphere is biased towards the local level, whereas the right hemisphere is biased towards the global level. Results of two studies show attention-focused people with a right ear preference (biased towards the left hemisphere) are better at local tasks, whereas people with a left ear preference (biased towards the right hemisph… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…LH advantage) are better at tasks that exert local focused attention, whereas those with a left-ear preference (i.e. biased toward the RH) are better at tasks that require a more global view [292]. …”
Section: Abnormal Social Behaviorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…LH advantage) are better at tasks that exert local focused attention, whereas those with a left-ear preference (i.e. biased toward the RH) are better at tasks that require a more global view [292]. …”
Section: Abnormal Social Behaviorsmentioning
confidence: 99%