On language laterality in normal dextrals and sinistrals: Results from the Bilateral Object Naming Latency Task

Rasmussen and Milner [ N.Y. Acad. Sci. Vol. 299, pp. 355–379, 1977] published data on late-lesioned (after age 6) epileptic patients who had suffered left hemisphere lesions. They estimated that left hemisphere dominance occurred in 96% of dextrals and 70% of sinistrals. These figures have been rega...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuropsychologia 1995-12, Vol.33 (12), p.1627-1635
Hauptverfasser: McKeever, Walter F., Seitz, Karen S., Krutsch, Annette J., Van Eys, Patti L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Rasmussen and Milner [ N.Y. Acad. Sci. Vol. 299, pp. 355–379, 1977] published data on late-lesioned (after age 6) epileptic patients who had suffered left hemisphere lesions. They estimated that left hemisphere dominance occurred in 96% of dextrals and 70% of sinistrals. These figures have been regarded as valid estimates for normal dextrals and sinistrals. We administered the Bilateral Object Naming Latency Task, a verbal tachistoscopic task with very good psychometric properties, to 188 dextral and 72 sinistral normals. Results showed that 93.6% of the dextrals and 80.3% of the sinistrals were left hemisphere dominant. A consideration of results from a number of carefully conducted dichotic listening studies suggests, as do present results, that the 70% left-dominance estimate of Rasmussen and Milner for normal sinistrals may be too low by about 10%. It is suggested that ‘bilateral dominance’, present in 15% of the epileptic sinistrals of Rasmussen and Milner, may be much less common in normal sinistrals.
ISSN:0028-3932
1873-3514
DOI:10.1016/0028-3932(95)00042-9