PMID: 6537239Jan 1, 1984Paper

Rhythm length and hemispheric asymmetry

Brain and Cognition
G Ben-Dov, A Carmon

Abstract

Conflicting evidence has appeared in the literature concerning hemispheric asymmetry in the perception of rhythm. The present study investigated the effects of rhythm length on relative cerebral dominance. Twenty-four subjects were presented with sequences of one to four time intervals bounded by light flashes. The subjects' task was to determine if two such sequences were the same or different. The first rhythm was presented in both visual fields and the second only to one visual field. Reaction times and number of errors were recorded. It was found that increasing rhythm length resulted in a shift in cerebral dominance from left to right hemisphere. An interpretation of these findings was suggested in terms of the preferred mode of processing of each hemisphere, analytic vs. holistic.

References

Jan 1, 1976·The International Journal of Neuroscience·G Ben-Dov, A Carmon
Jan 1, 1973·The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America·Y HalperinA Carmon
Mar 1, 1974·Journal of Experimental Psychology·P T Sturges, J G Martin
Mar 1, 1974·Journal of Experimental Psychology·G M Robinson, D J Solomon
Feb 1, 1974·The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America·G PapçunR Harshman
Mar 1, 1967·Brain : a Journal of Neurology·M S Gazzaniga, R W Sperry

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Citations

May 25, 2002·Brain and Cognition·W C J AlphertsP C van Rijen
Oct 7, 2004·Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human Perception and Performance·Geoffrey L Collier, R Todd Ogden
Dec 4, 2010·Laterality·Simon GrondinNicolas Bisson
May 10, 2005·Brain and Cognition·Simon Grondin, Christine Girard
Jun 1, 1986·The International Journal of Neuroscience·H W Gordon

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