1984
DOI: 10.1016/0006-8993(84)90228-2
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Unilateral memory after binocular discrimination training: left hemisphere dominance in the chick?

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Cited by 44 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Studies, which have tested the visual discrimination in the chick, have consistently shown the importance of the right eye and the left hemisphere pathway in acquisition of such tasks (Rogers, 1986). The results presented here in which the left hemisphere has a superiority to the right hemisphere in terms of increase in N V syn after training in certain illumination colors are consistent with the idea of the importance of the left hemisphere in visual discrimination learning (Gasten and Gasten, 1984;Rogers, 1986;Patel and Stewart, 1988;Doubell and Stewart, 1993).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
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“…Studies, which have tested the visual discrimination in the chick, have consistently shown the importance of the right eye and the left hemisphere pathway in acquisition of such tasks (Rogers, 1986). The results presented here in which the left hemisphere has a superiority to the right hemisphere in terms of increase in N V syn after training in certain illumination colors are consistent with the idea of the importance of the left hemisphere in visual discrimination learning (Gasten and Gasten, 1984;Rogers, 1986;Patel and Stewart, 1988;Doubell and Stewart, 1993).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…In their study, the number and structure of dendritic spines were investigated one day after passive avoidance training and it has been found that the increase of the spine density is more pronounced in the left IMHV. It is likely that changes in spine shape and an increase of spine density observed in the left hemisphere may be involved in modulating synaptic connectivity, since information reaches the cell body via dendritic spines (Patel and Stewart, 1988) Gaston and Gaston have also suggested that memory for complex pattern discrimination task may be stored only in the left hemisphere (Gasten and Gasten, 1984). Moreover, the pathways used in the passive avoidance learning task are located in the left hemisphere, and interfering with this hemisphere disrupts their development, but similar disruption is not observed following similar treatment in the right hemisphere (Rogers, 1986).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies in various avian species revealed a superiority of the right eye for experiments which require the birds to distinguish between different visual objects [7,18,31,42], to memorize hundreds of abstract patterns [6], or to infer a higher-order rule from serial visual color reversals [2]. If using object-cues or absolute distance measures during orientation in small-scale [32,40] or large-scale environments [41] chicks and pigeons also reach higher levels of performance when viewing with the right eye.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The common aspect of all of these studies is that lateralized performance levels are observed while the animals discriminate the relevant stimuli for minutes or hours with the left or the right eye only. In some of these studies it could be shown that the right hemisphere could not access over 30 or more minutes the knowledge about the consequences of past behavior, which was present in the left half of the brain [4,8]. Although birds lack a corpus callosum, they have a hippocampal, an anterior, an amygdalar, a supraoptic as well as several brainstem commissures.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%