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Assume that your right and left hemispheres have been severed (cut). You are sea

ID: 95061 • Letter: A

Question

Assume that your right and left hemispheres have been severed (cut). You are seated in a testing room wearing a special set of glasses that allows a technician to present a visual stimulus sperately to either your right or your left visual field. What kinds of resposnes might you be required to make when an object is presented to you on one side of your visual plane? Suppose that we flash a picture of a baseball in your right visual field and ask you to name the object. If we flash a picture of a violin in your left visual field and ask you to name the object, can you name it? Explain what happened. What happens if your right and left hemispheres are not severed?

Explanation / Answer

The left and right hemispheres of the brain may seem like mirror images of each other superficially, however, they are very different in their functioning which is known as lateralization of functions. The two hemispheres perform different functions and together they are capable of executing complex actions. Corpus Callosum, is a band of nerve fibers which connects the two hemispheres of the brain. It passes between the two hemispheres, through which they communicate. If the Corpus Callosum is cut there's no communication between the two hemispheres.

Assuming that the two hemispheres are no longer connected, and the subject is seated with a special set of glasses and is presented with a visual stimulus on the right visual field which is a picture of a baseball, then, he is verbally going to answer what he sees. The response made by him is that he sees a baseball. The way our visual system is constructed, the right visual field stimulates the left hemisphere, which controls speech. Thus, he was able to answer what he could see, verbally. Also considering if a picture of violin is flashed to the same subject on the left visual field, the subject would not be able to name it. He would instead mimic what he sees through actions or gestures but he would not be able to name it. The left visual field stimulates the right hemisphere, which controls our motor activities. This is the reason why both the hemispheres cannot be severed. They need to communicate with each other for a person to perform functions normally. If they were not severed, the subject would have answered what he sees on the screen, a baseball and a violin.