“…Despite these differences, the direction of the horizontal bias in the visual and haptic modality tends to be similar, with neurologically normal individuals bisecting to the left of the veridical midpoint ( Jewell & McCourt, 2000; see also Gallace, Auvray, & Spence, 2007, on the possible involvement of higher order multisensory/amodal processes in bisection tasks). It is important to note, however, that the extent of pseudoneglect in the haptic modality depends on numerous modality-specific factors, such as the way the rod is explored (one search vs. multiple searches; see Baek et al, 2002), whether the left or right hand is used for scanning (e.g., Brodie & Pettigrew, 1995), tactile versus kinesthetic scanning ( Sampaio & Philip, 1991), participants' handedness (e.g., Sampaio & Chokron, 1992), and the spatial position of the line with respect to the head-body axis ( Bradshaw, Nettleton, Nathan, & Wilson, 1983). Conversely, the bias reported in the haptic modality for rods presented in the vertical and radial planes is the opposite of that observed with visually presented lines; that is, toward the body in the radial plane and in the downward direction in the vertical plane ( Baek et al, 2002;Chewning et al, 1998;Shelton et al, 1990).…”