Home
Scholarly Works
Brain Asymmetry, Functional Aspects
Chapter

Brain Asymmetry, Functional Aspects

Abstract

Functional asymmetry of the two cerebral hemispheres is a major characteristic of human brain organization and cognition. This phenomenon is also termed cerebral dominance, functional or brain lateralization, and hemispheric specialization. These terms all refer to the fact that the right and left hemispheres have different roles in mediating behavior and higher mental processes or cognition. In general terms, speech, language, and praxic (motor planning) skills are dependent on left hemisphere functioning, whereas spatial skills are dependent on right hemisphere processing. Functional asymmetry exists not only in adults, but also in young children and infants and, at least to some extent, in some nonhuman species.

Authors

Witelson SF

Book title

States of Brain and Mind

Pagination

pp. 13-16

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

January 1, 1988

DOI

10.1007/978-1-4899-6771-8_6
View published work (Non-McMaster Users)

Contact the Experts team