Visual recognition of mirrored letters and the right hemisphere advantage for mirror-invariant object recognition.

Psychon Bull Rev

Department of Psychology, University of Nevada Reno, 1664 N. Virginia Street, Mailstop 296, Reno, NV, 89557, USA.

Published: August 2018

Unlike most objects, letter recognition is closely tied to orientation and mirroring, which in some cases (e.g., b and d), defines letter identity altogether. We combined a divided field paradigm with a negative priming procedure to examine the relationship between mirror generalization, its suppression during letter recognition, and language-related visual processing in the left hemisphere. In our main experiment, observers performed a centrally viewed letter-recognition task, followed by an object-recognition task performed in either the right or the left visual hemifield. The results show clear evidence of inhibition of mirror generalization for objects viewed in either hemifield but a right hemisphere advantage for visual recognition of mirrored and repeated objects. Our findings are consistent with an opponent relationship between symmetry-related visual processing in the right hemisphere and neurally recycled mechanisms in the left hemisphere used for visual processing of written language stimuli.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6501580PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13423-018-1472-3DOI Listing

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