2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2015.10.045
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Right hemisphere dominance directly predicts both baseline V1 cortical excitability and the degree of top-down modulation exerted over low-level brain structures

Abstract: HighlightsLine bisection predicts V1 excitability.Line bisection predicts degree of VOR modulation.Line bisection correlates with tDCS-mediated vestibular-nystagmus suppression.Degree of nystagmus suppression is a bio-marker of right hemisphere dominance.

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Cited by 27 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…Rather, it is the degree of cortically mediated suppression of the brainstem VOR that correlates with the anxiety scores, implying a cortically‐controlled re‐scaling of brainstem‐cortical interactions. In line with this, our previous findings have demonstrated that the nystagmus suppression index correlates with cognitive biases such as numerical magnitude perception and spatial attention (Arshad et al., , ), further supporting the notion of a brainstem‐cortical re‐scaling network.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 83%
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“…Rather, it is the degree of cortically mediated suppression of the brainstem VOR that correlates with the anxiety scores, implying a cortically‐controlled re‐scaling of brainstem‐cortical interactions. In line with this, our previous findings have demonstrated that the nystagmus suppression index correlates with cognitive biases such as numerical magnitude perception and spatial attention (Arshad et al., , ), further supporting the notion of a brainstem‐cortical re‐scaling network.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 83%
“…With respect to vestibular processing, it has been shown that in right‐handed individuals predominant processing of vestibular signals occurs in the right hemisphere, whereas in left‐handers, the left hemisphere is dominant (Arshad et al., ; Dieterich et al., ; Nigmatullina et al., ). Furthermore, the degree of right hemisphere dominance in the vestibular system has been shown to influence both cortical (i.e., early visual cortex excitability) and brainstem (i.e., modulation of the vestibulo‐ocular reflex) functions (Arshad et al., ). Additionally, right hemisphere vestibulo‐cortical dominance has been shown to influence the modulation of vestibular thresholds following a change in cortical excitability (Bednarczuk et al., ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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