Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Visual Implicit Memory in the Left Hemisphere: Evidence From Patients With Callosotomies and Right Occipital Lobe Lesions

View through CrossRef
Identification of visually presented objects and words is facilitated by implicit memory for past visual experiences with those items. Several behavioral and neuroimaging studies suggest that this form of memory is dependent on perceptual processes localized in the right occipital lobe. We tested this claim by examining implicit memory in patients with extensive right occipital lobe lesions, using lexical-decision, mirror-reading, picture-fragment, and word-fragment-completion tests, and found that these patients exhibited normal levels of priming. We also examined implicit memory in patients with complete callosotomies, using standard and divided-visual-field word-fragment-completion procedures, and found that the isolated left hemisphere exhibited normal priming effects. The results indicate that the right occipital lobe does not play a necessary role in visual implicit memory, and that the isolated left hemisphere can support normal levels of visual priming in a variety of tasks.
Title: Visual Implicit Memory in the Left Hemisphere: Evidence From Patients With Callosotomies and Right Occipital Lobe Lesions
Description:
Identification of visually presented objects and words is facilitated by implicit memory for past visual experiences with those items.
Several behavioral and neuroimaging studies suggest that this form of memory is dependent on perceptual processes localized in the right occipital lobe.
We tested this claim by examining implicit memory in patients with extensive right occipital lobe lesions, using lexical-decision, mirror-reading, picture-fragment, and word-fragment-completion tests, and found that these patients exhibited normal levels of priming.
We also examined implicit memory in patients with complete callosotomies, using standard and divided-visual-field word-fragment-completion procedures, and found that the isolated left hemisphere exhibited normal priming effects.
The results indicate that the right occipital lobe does not play a necessary role in visual implicit memory, and that the isolated left hemisphere can support normal levels of visual priming in a variety of tasks.

Related Results

USE OF KRACKOW SUTURES IN PATIENTS WITH LOWER POLE PATELLA FRACTURES:A CLINICAL OUTCOME STUDY
USE OF KRACKOW SUTURES IN PATIENTS WITH LOWER POLE PATELLA FRACTURES:A CLINICAL OUTCOME STUDY
Introduction: Patients with distal pole fractures of the patella have a disrupted extensor mechanism, which results in considerable functional disability. The ideal method should c...
Frequency of Depressive Illness among Caregivers of Drug Addicted Patients
Frequency of Depressive Illness among Caregivers of Drug Addicted Patients
Introduction: Addictions and mental sickness are among the foremost expensive diseases in the world, according to a Worldwide Burden of Illness research, but they often go unnotice...
MANIFESTATIONS BUCCO-DENTAIRES DU REFLUX GASTRO-OESOPHAGIEN
MANIFESTATIONS BUCCO-DENTAIRES DU REFLUX GASTRO-OESOPHAGIEN
Introduction : Le reflux gastro-oesophagien (RGO) est une pathologie benigne mais vu sa chronicite et ses complications a long terme, il predispose a des lesions precancereuses et ...
Role of motivation in successful orthodontic treatment in teenagers
Role of motivation in successful orthodontic treatment in teenagers
BACKGROUND: Orthodontic treatment is a long-term and responsible therapy that affects the quality of life of a patient at any age. Adolescence is the most suitable for eliminating ...
Neutrophil Lymphocyte Ratio: A Prognostic Indicator of Limb Survival in CLI Patients
Neutrophil Lymphocyte Ratio: A Prognostic Indicator of Limb Survival in CLI Patients
Aims and Objectives: This study was designed to evaluate the admission neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio in predicting the risk of amputation in critical limb ischemia patients who coul...

Back to Top