Lateralisation of language functions in the brain: Effects of handedness

Evidence suggests that an individuals’ handedness is intrinsically linked to their brain asymmetry for speech and language functions. The best estimates suggest that the left hemisphere is dominant for language in 95% of right-handers and 70-85% of left-handers. Atypical or reversed language lateral...

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Main Author: O'Regan, Louise
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60533/
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author O'Regan, Louise
author_facet O'Regan, Louise
author_sort O'Regan, Louise
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Evidence suggests that an individuals’ handedness is intrinsically linked to their brain asymmetry for speech and language functions. The best estimates suggest that the left hemisphere is dominant for language in 95% of right-handers and 70-85% of left-handers. Atypical or reversed language laterality patterns have been observed in 4% of strong right-handers and up to 27% of strong left-handers, which points to increased variability due to non-right-handedness and confirms that handedness is a useful tool to study individual differences in brain organisation. Many studies investigating the relationship between handedness and language dominance rely heavily on speech production tasks. However, speech production represents just one aspect of language, which is a highly complex and multifaceted cognitive function. Therefore, the relationship between handedness and hemispheric asymmetries for less commonly-studied functions such as word comprehension, lexical decision, semantic processing and word matching is poorly understood. This is possibly due to the fact that these functions are not as strongly lateralised as speech production. The studies presented in the current thesis compared left- and right-handers on a variety of language tasks. Use was made of divided visual field (DVF) methodology, in order to examine both hemispheric differences and interhemispheric communication during task performance. The DVF paradigm is a technique that reliably measures hemispheric asymmetries in healthy humans. Hemispheric asymmetries were investigated using three behavioural metrics: accuracy, reaction time and laterality indices. The findings presented in this thesis show that right-handers tend to benefit more from left-sided lateralisation for language comprehension, particularly of abstract as compared to concrete information, whereas the left-handers demonstrate a less focal profile, characterised by increased input from the right hemisphere during language-related tasks. We also found that left-handers rely on interhemispheric interactions during word processing to a greater degree than right-handers. The findings of this thesis offer insights into the relationship between handedness and the lateralisation of a variety of language functions in the brain. It is argued that the study of handedness is important as handedness represents a distinct form of individual difference that permits us to explore differences in cognitive performance and enables us to further our understanding of the neural mechanisms that underpin cognitive processing.
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spelling nottingham-605332025-02-28T14:54:20Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60533/ Lateralisation of language functions in the brain: Effects of handedness O'Regan, Louise Evidence suggests that an individuals’ handedness is intrinsically linked to their brain asymmetry for speech and language functions. The best estimates suggest that the left hemisphere is dominant for language in 95% of right-handers and 70-85% of left-handers. Atypical or reversed language laterality patterns have been observed in 4% of strong right-handers and up to 27% of strong left-handers, which points to increased variability due to non-right-handedness and confirms that handedness is a useful tool to study individual differences in brain organisation. Many studies investigating the relationship between handedness and language dominance rely heavily on speech production tasks. However, speech production represents just one aspect of language, which is a highly complex and multifaceted cognitive function. Therefore, the relationship between handedness and hemispheric asymmetries for less commonly-studied functions such as word comprehension, lexical decision, semantic processing and word matching is poorly understood. This is possibly due to the fact that these functions are not as strongly lateralised as speech production. The studies presented in the current thesis compared left- and right-handers on a variety of language tasks. Use was made of divided visual field (DVF) methodology, in order to examine both hemispheric differences and interhemispheric communication during task performance. The DVF paradigm is a technique that reliably measures hemispheric asymmetries in healthy humans. Hemispheric asymmetries were investigated using three behavioural metrics: accuracy, reaction time and laterality indices. The findings presented in this thesis show that right-handers tend to benefit more from left-sided lateralisation for language comprehension, particularly of abstract as compared to concrete information, whereas the left-handers demonstrate a less focal profile, characterised by increased input from the right hemisphere during language-related tasks. We also found that left-handers rely on interhemispheric interactions during word processing to a greater degree than right-handers. The findings of this thesis offer insights into the relationship between handedness and the lateralisation of a variety of language functions in the brain. It is argued that the study of handedness is important as handedness represents a distinct form of individual difference that permits us to explore differences in cognitive performance and enables us to further our understanding of the neural mechanisms that underpin cognitive processing. 2020-07-24 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60533/1/LORegan-PhD-2019.pdf O'Regan, Louise (2020) Lateralisation of language functions in the brain: Effects of handedness. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. handedness hemispheric asymmetry cerebral lateralisation language divided visual field
spellingShingle handedness
hemispheric asymmetry
cerebral lateralisation
language
divided visual field
O'Regan, Louise
Lateralisation of language functions in the brain: Effects of handedness
title Lateralisation of language functions in the brain: Effects of handedness
title_full Lateralisation of language functions in the brain: Effects of handedness
title_fullStr Lateralisation of language functions in the brain: Effects of handedness
title_full_unstemmed Lateralisation of language functions in the brain: Effects of handedness
title_short Lateralisation of language functions in the brain: Effects of handedness
title_sort lateralisation of language functions in the brain: effects of handedness
topic handedness
hemispheric asymmetry
cerebral lateralisation
language
divided visual field
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60533/