Lateralization and cognitive systems
[摘要] Lateralization of brain and behavior in both humans and non-human animals is a topic that has fascinated neuroscientists since its initial discovery in the mid of the nineteenth century (Broca, 1861; Dax, 1865; Oppenheimer, 1977; Ströckens et al., 2013). Hemispheric asymmetries are abundant in the anatomy, neurochemistry and cytoarchitecture of the vertebrate brain and over the decades, a number of cognitive abilities have been shown to heavily rely on lateralized processing in the brain, the most widely investigated being language (Corballis, 2012; Ocklenburg et al., 2013b). Other cognitive domains that depend on lateralized processing include emotional processing (Önal-Hartmann et al., 2012), face and body perception (Thoma et al., 2014), spatial attention (Duecker et al., 2013), fine motor skills (Arning et al., 2013) and memory (Habib et al., 2003)—just to name a few. However, the impact of lateralization of brain function is not limited to these “classical” domains of lateralization research. The efficiency of higher cognitive processes in the vertebrate brain does not only depend on the involved cognitive systems themselves, but also on earlier information processing stages (Knudsen, 2007). Therefore, functional hemispheric asymmetries in stimulus processing can affect the efficiency of virtually any cognitive domain. This principle has recently been demonstrated for executive functions mediated by fronto-striatal networks, including working memory processes (Beste et al., 2010a,b, 2011, 2012). Ocklenburg et al. (2011, 2012) could show that the efficiency of executive functions like response inhibition or task switching is modulated when functional hemispheric asymmetries affect stimulus processing.
[发布日期] [发布机构]
[效力级别] [学科分类] 心理学(综合)
[关键词] handedness;executive function;laterality;lateralization;hemispheric asymmetry;brain;language;brain structure [时效性]