1. The effects of left and right monocular viewing on hemispheric activation
- Author
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Jue Mo, Kenneth M. Heilman, Chao Wang, D. Brandon Burtis, John B. Williamson, and Mingzhou Ding
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Left and right ,Sympathetic Nervous System ,Adolescent ,Electroencephalography ,Reflex, Pupillary ,Functional Laterality ,050105 experimental psychology ,Lateralization of brain function ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Parasympathetic Nervous System ,Reference Values ,Vision, Monocular ,Parietal Lobe ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Cerebral Cortex ,Vision, Binocular ,Monocular ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,05 social sciences ,Alpha Rhythm ,Clinical Psychology ,Autonomic nervous system ,Neurology ,Female ,Occipital Lobe ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Prior research has revealed that whereas activation of the left hemisphere primarily increases the activity of the parasympathetic division of the autonomic nervous system, right-hemisphere activation increases the activity of the sympathetic division. In addition, each hemisphere primarily receives retinocollicular projections from the contralateral eye. A prior study reported that pupillary dilation was greater with left- than with right-eye monocular viewing. The goal of this study was to test the alternative hypotheses that this asymmetric pupil dilation with left-eye viewing was induced by activation of the right-hemispheric-mediated sympathetic activity, versus a reduction of left-hemisphere-mediated parasympathetic activity. Thus, this study was designed to learn whether there are changes in hemispheric activation, as measured by alteration of spontaneous alpha activity, during right versus left monocular viewing.High-density electroencephalography (EEG) was recorded from healthy participants viewing a crosshair with their right, left, or both eyes.There was a significantly less alpha power over the right hemisphere's parietal-occipital area with left and binocular viewing than with right-eye monocular viewing.The greater relative reduction of right-hemisphere alpha activity during left than during right monocular viewing provides further evidence that left-eye viewing induces greater increase in right-hemisphere activation than does right-eye viewing.
- Published
- 2017
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