ABSTRACT

There have been numerous research reports concerning functional differences between the two human cerebral hemispheres. The data were obtained by psychiatrists, neurologists, and psychologists, using a wide variety of techniques. In this chapter, we present all various findings grouped under several general causes which result, in their turn, from peculiarities of information processing in the left and the right brain halves. Since each of the mentioned fields use their own traditional terminilogy, our presentation is somewhat heterogeneous. And because the available findings are vast (and, to a certain extent, contradictory) we have only used those studies that are directly related to general structure of the hemispheres’ informational interaction in task performance. In doing so, we might have overly simplified the situation, made it more difficult, or left out a number of findings.