SummaryEmotional behaviours in humans and animals, such as kissing or tail wagging, sometimes show characteristic lateral asymmetries [1,2]. Such asymmetries suggest differences in the involvement of the cerebral hemispheres in the expression of emotion. An established example is the expressiveness advantage of the left hemiface that has been demonstrated with chimeric face stimuli, static pictures of emotional expressions with one side of the face replaced by the mirror image of the other [3]. While this result has been interpreted as support for a right-hemisphere dominance in emotion expression [4], substantial ipsilateral innervation of the relevant facial musculature [5] and findings of reduced or reversed asymmetry for positive emotio...
This research compared the two models of emotional lateralisation: the right hemisphere hypothesis a...
Investigated hemispheric asymmetries in the perception of positive and negative emotion. The moderat...
After decades of research, it remains unclear whether emotion lateralization occurs because one hemi...
SummaryEmotional behaviours in humans and animals, such as kissing or tail wagging, sometimes show c...
Research on the asymmetry of facial expressions is reviewed in terms of neuroanatomy, qualitative an...
Although the population-level preference for the use of the right hand is the clearest example of be...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Laterality: Asymmetrie...
Sex differences in lateralisation have been examined frequently, but have found varying and contradi...
Abstract--To investigate possible facial asymmetries during the production of posed and spontaneous ...
Abstract. Using image processing technique and newly developed cognitive evaluation method, asymmetr...
Facial asymmetry is developed in every human and has an impact on everyone's life. Research of facia...
Research on lateralization can give us information about the way how the hemispheres of the brain ar...
Where hemispheric lateralization was once considered an exclusively human trait, it is increasingly ...
Recent research indicates that (a) the perception and expression of facial emotion are lateralized t...
This edited book brings together research reports on the asymmetry of brain function in various spec...
This research compared the two models of emotional lateralisation: the right hemisphere hypothesis a...
Investigated hemispheric asymmetries in the perception of positive and negative emotion. The moderat...
After decades of research, it remains unclear whether emotion lateralization occurs because one hemi...
SummaryEmotional behaviours in humans and animals, such as kissing or tail wagging, sometimes show c...
Research on the asymmetry of facial expressions is reviewed in terms of neuroanatomy, qualitative an...
Although the population-level preference for the use of the right hand is the clearest example of be...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Laterality: Asymmetrie...
Sex differences in lateralisation have been examined frequently, but have found varying and contradi...
Abstract--To investigate possible facial asymmetries during the production of posed and spontaneous ...
Abstract. Using image processing technique and newly developed cognitive evaluation method, asymmetr...
Facial asymmetry is developed in every human and has an impact on everyone's life. Research of facia...
Research on lateralization can give us information about the way how the hemispheres of the brain ar...
Where hemispheric lateralization was once considered an exclusively human trait, it is increasingly ...
Recent research indicates that (a) the perception and expression of facial emotion are lateralized t...
This edited book brings together research reports on the asymmetry of brain function in various spec...
This research compared the two models of emotional lateralisation: the right hemisphere hypothesis a...
Investigated hemispheric asymmetries in the perception of positive and negative emotion. The moderat...
After decades of research, it remains unclear whether emotion lateralization occurs because one hemi...