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The contralateral organization of visual memory: A theoretical concept and a research tool

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 January 2001

GABRIELE GRATTON
Affiliation:
University of Missouri, Columbia, USA
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Abstract

Contralateral-control methods can be applied to psychophysiology and in particular to the study of visual memory. Visual memory possesses some degree of hemispheric organization, so that visual memory traces for laterally presented stimuli are stronger or more durable in the hemisphere contralateral to the hemifield where the stimuli were first presented. I first introduce the concept of hemispheric organization of function. Then I discuss how hemispheric organization can be exploited for obtaining information about the time course and brain localization of psychological processes, using a contralateral-control method. Behavioral and event-related brain potential data support the hemispheric organization view of visual memory, and the contralateral-control method, in conjunction with the recording of the event-related optical signal, can be used to reveal the existence of memory-driven processes in early stations of the visual system.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
1998 Society for Psychophysiological Research

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