Although the hemispheres likely carry out different processes during reading, currently little is known about how the consistency effect and the difficulty of the task influences hemispheric processing during text comprehension. In the current study participants read texts promoting an inference, and performed a lexical decision task to inference-related targets presented to the left visual field-right hemisphere or the right visual field-left hemisphere. To manipulate the consistency of information targets were either consistent or inconsistent with the inference. To manipulate difficulty the antecedent and its referent were either separated by two sentences (i.e., the less-difficult condition) or four sentences (i.e., the more-difficult condition). In the consistent condition facilitation was greater in the left hemisphere than the right hemisphere. In the inconsistent condition facilitation was greater in the right hemisphere than the left hemisphere. When analyses were combined across conditions, consistent targets showed greater facilitation in the left hemisphere than in the right hemisphere. Interestingly the level of difficulty did not mediate how the hemispheres process inferences. The current findings suggest that the consistency of information, rather than the difficulty of a task, primarily influences inference generation in the cerebral hemispheres.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1357650X.2011.586781 | DOI Listing |
Neuroimage
January 2025
Department of Neuroscience, Imaging and Clinical Sciences, University G. d'Annunzio of Chieti-Pescara, Via dei Vestini 31, 66100, Chieti, Italy; ITAB Institute for Advanced Biomedical Technologies, University G. d'Annunzio of Chieti-Pescara, Via dei Vestini 31, 66100, Chieti, Italy. Electronic address:
Cued recollection involves the retrieval of different features of the encoded event. Previous research has shown that the recollection of complex events jointly recruits the Default Mode and the Frontoparietal Control networks, but the degree to which activity within these networks varies as a function of the particular memory dimension (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPost-stroke aphasia is a network disorder characterized by language impairments and aberrant network activation. While patients with post-stroke aphasia recover over time, the dynamics of the underlying changes in the brain remain elusive. Neuroimaging work demonstrated that language recovery is a heterogeneous process, characterized by varying activation levels in several regions of the left-hemispheric language network and the domain-general bilateral multiple-demand network.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Pharmacol
January 2025
Waisman Center, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States.
Introduction: 7,8-Dihydroxyflavone (7,8-DHF) is a promising translational therapy in several brain injury models, including the neonatal hypoxia-ischemia (HI) model in mice. However, the neuroprotective effect of 7,8-DHF was only observed in female, but not male, neonatal mice with HI brain injury. It is unknown whether HI-induced physiological changes affect brain distribution of 7,8-DHF differently for male versus female mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
January 2025
Support Centre for Advanced Neuroimaging (SCAN), Institute for Diagnostic and Interventional Neuroradiology, Inselspital, Bern University Hospital, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
This study aims to establish an imitation task of multi-finger haptics in the context of regular grasping and regrasping processes during activities of daily living. A video guided the 26 healthy, right-handed volunteers through the three phases of the task: (1) fixation of a hand holding a cuboid, (2) observation of the sensori-motor manipulation, (3) imitation of that motor action. fMRI recorded the task; graph analysis of the acquisitions revealed the associated functional cerebral connectivity patterns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Biol Sci
January 2025
Animal Physiology Unit, Institute of Neurobiology, University of Tübingen, Auf der Morgenstelle 28, Tübingen 72076, Germany.
Like humans and many other animal species, birds exhibit left-right asymmetries in certain behaviours due to differences in hemispheric brain functions. While the lateralization of sensory and motor functions is well established in birds, the potential lateralization of high-level executive control functions, such as volitional attention, remains unknown. Here, we demonstrate that carrion crows exhibit more pronounced volitional (endogenous) attention for stimuli monocularly viewed with the left eye and thus in the left visual hemifield.
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