Dissociating prelexical and postlexical processing of affective information in the two hemispheres: effects of the stimulus presentation format

Brain Lang. 2002 Mar;80(3):269-86. doi: 10.1006/brln.2001.2586.

Abstract

Using a lexical decision task, the authors investigated whether brain asymmetries in the detection of emotionally negative semantic associations arise only at a perceptually discriminative stage at which lexical analysis is accurate or can already be found at crude and incomplete levels of perceptual representation at which word-nonword discrimination is based solely on guessing. Emotionally negative and neutral items were presented near perceptual threshold in the left and right visual hemifields. Word-nonword discrimination performance as well as the bias to classify a stimulus as a "word" (whether or not it actually is a word) were assessed for a normal, horizontal stimulus presentation format (Experiment 1) and for an unusual, vertical presentation format (Experiment 2). Results show that while the two hemispheres are equally able to detect affective semantic associations at a prelexical processing stage (both experiments), the right hemisphere is superior at a postlexical, perceptually discriminative stage (Experiment 2). Moreover, the findings suggest that only an unusual, nonoverlearned stimulus presentation format allows adequate assessment of the right hemisphere's lexical-semantic skills.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Affect*
  • Brain / physiology*
  • Discrimination, Psychological
  • Female
  • Functional Laterality / physiology*
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Random Allocation
  • Recognition, Psychology
  • Unconscious, Psychology
  • Visual Fields / physiology
  • Visual Perception / physiology*
  • Vocabulary*