1973
DOI: 10.1016/0001-6918(73)90002-4
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Ear asymmetry in perception of emotional non-verbal stimuli

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Cited by 206 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…Some particularly relevant acoustical features related to emotional prosody, however, seem to involve the right hemisphere to a greater extent and induce more stimulus-related processing in this hemisphere (Ross & Monnot, 2008), as shown by neuroimaging results ( Wildgruber, Ackermann, Kreifelts, & Ethofer, 2006;Sander & Scheich, 2001) and behavioral studies such as the dichotic listening task (Carmon & Nachshon, 1973;Haggard & Parkinson, 1971). This lateralization is in line with our findings, which indicated that the modulation effect was mainly driven by targets presented to the left visual field, which are primarily processed by the right hemisphere.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Some particularly relevant acoustical features related to emotional prosody, however, seem to involve the right hemisphere to a greater extent and induce more stimulus-related processing in this hemisphere (Ross & Monnot, 2008), as shown by neuroimaging results ( Wildgruber, Ackermann, Kreifelts, & Ethofer, 2006;Sander & Scheich, 2001) and behavioral studies such as the dichotic listening task (Carmon & Nachshon, 1973;Haggard & Parkinson, 1971). This lateralization is in line with our findings, which indicated that the modulation effect was mainly driven by targets presented to the left visual field, which are primarily processed by the right hemisphere.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Memory for faces (Geffen, Bradshaw, & Wallace 1971), memory for forms (Milner 1971), and perception of human emotion (Carmon & Nachshon 1973) have been associated with right-hemisphere brain function; these abilities are also characteristic of fieldsensitive people. On the other hand, many verbal abilities as well as some measures of body articulation (Kinsbourne & Warrington 1962) have been related to left-hemisphere function; field-independent people are more likely to demonstrate superior performance on measures of these constructs.…”
Section: Guyer and Friedman 659mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research on normal intact subjects using dichotic listening (Ley and Bryden, 1982;Carmon and Nachshon, 1973;Haggard and Parkinson, 1971) and conjugate lateral eye movement (Schwartz et al, 1975) as well as in some visual laterality experiments (Landis et al, 1979;Ley and Bryden, 1979) have suggested, despite some methodological difficulties, a special facility in the right hemisphere for the perception and analysis of the emotional content of stimuli. In addition the finding that the left side of the face is more expressive has led researchers to argue that the right hemisphere also controls the expression of emotion (Campbell, 1978;Sackheim and Gur, 1978;Moscovitch and Olds, 1982).…”
Section: Psychologicalmentioning
confidence: 99%