lateralisation - the idea that the two halves of the brain are functionally different and some mental processes are mainly controlled by one hemisphere
left hemisphere - language, computation and logical reasoning
right hemisphere - spatial reasoning, facial recognition and music
split-brain research - studies looking at epileptic patients who have experienced surgical separation of the two hemispheres of the brain
split-brain research
sperry - studied split-brain patients who had an operation that severed the corpus collosum, which allows us to see how the hemispheres are specialised for different functions as they are unable to communicate with eachother
11 split-brain patients
patient given a 'fixation point' to look at on a screen
image is presented to the left or right visual field
the function of each hemisphere is viewed in isolation as information can't be transferred from one to another
findings - describing what you see
when a picture of an object was shown to the right visual field they could easily describe what was seen as language and right visual field information are processed in the left hemisphere
when it was shown to the left visual field they couldn't describe it or typically said there wasn't anything there because left visual field information is processed in the right hemisphere which has no language centre
findings - recognition by touch
individuals were able to find an object from a bag without seeing them if they were presented with a word in their left visual field and using their left hand as they are both controlled by the right hemisphere which specialises in spatial awareness
they couldn't use their right hand to find an object when presented the word in their right visual field because the left hemisphere isn't specialised for spatial skills
findings - composite words
if two words were presented simultaneously (one to each visual field) the individual would select the object presented to their left visual field using their left hand because the right hemisphere controls spatial tasks, but they would say the word in their right visual field as the left hemisphere controls language production
findings - matching faces
when matching a face from a series of other faces the picture the picture processed by the left visual field was selected while the picture presented to the right was ignored
when each visual field was given a half of different faces, the face in the right visual field would be described but the individual would pick a picture that matched the face in the left visual field
evaluation - research conclusions
sperry's research showed that the brain has lateralised functions
other research shows that the right hemisphere can produce basic words and phrases and contributes to emotional and holistic content in language
evaluation
+ highly standardised and specialised procedures
+ well controlled
+ led to theoretical and philosophical debates
- differences in function of the hemispheres is exaggerated eg. some language functions such as tone recognition are in the right hemisphere
- may be issues in generalisation as all participants had severe epilepsy
- control group used had no history of epilepsy which may be the third variable