Lateralization of Spatial Relation Processing in Natural Scenes

Publication date

2013

Authors

Van der Ham, C.J.M.ISNI 0000000387917681
van Zandvoort, MartineISNI 0000000393673388
Postma, AlbertISNI 0000000392808113

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Spatial relations between objects can be represented in a categorical and in a coordinate manner. Categorical representations reflect abstract relations, like ‘left of’ or ‘under’, whereas coordinate representations concern exact metric distances between objects. These two types of spatial relations are thought to be linked to a left hemisphere and a right hemisphere advantage, respectively. This lateralization pattern was examined in a visual search task, making use of natural scenes, in patients with unilateral brain damage and healthy controls. In addition, all participants performed a low-level spatial relation processing task. The results suggest that the lateralization pattern commonly found for spatial relation processing in low-level perceptual tasks is also applicable to the processing of complex visual scenes.

Keywords

Spatial relations, lateralization, scene perception

Citation

Van der Ham, C J M, Van Zandvoort, M J E & Postma, A 2013, 'Lateralization of Spatial Relation Processing in Natural Scenes', Behavioural Neurology, vol. 26, no. 3, pp. 175-177. https://doi.org/10.3233/BEN-2012-129004