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Journal ArticleDOI

Right frontal lobe activation and right hemisphere performance. Decrement during a depressed mood.

TLDR
For instance, this paper found that depressed mood is characterized by asymmetrical EEG activation over the frontal lobes, with relatively greater activity in the right frontal region than the left frontal region.
Abstract
• Evidence from psychiatric patients has suggested that depressive affect may coincide with a decrement in the functioning of the right cerebral hemisphere. We have observed that college students who reported greater depression also reported less vivid imagery. Students undergoing experimental induction of depressive and euphoric moods in the laboratory showed an auditory attentional bias and impaired imagery during the depression condition, while their arithmetic task performance was unchanged. A second mood-induction experiment indicated a depressed mood to be characterized by asymmetrical EEG activation over the frontal lobes, with relatively greater activity in the right frontal region. These observations suggest that anterior regions of the brain may modulate the differential effects of emotional arousal on the information-processing capacities of the cerebral hemispheres.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

P300 findings for depressive and anxiety disorders.

TL;DR: Researchers in psychopathology seized upon P300 as a means of studying alterations of cognitive function in psychiatric disorders and the relation of these to possible CNS dysfunction, and presents some new P300 findings for depressive and anxiety disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of mood on lacrimal flow: sex differences and asymmetry.

TL;DR: For both sexes, the sadness condition was associated with reports of greater dysphoric affect than the elation condition, and in females, lacrimal flow tended to increase following the sadness manipulation and significantly decreased following the happiness manipulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cerebral laterality in affect and affective illness: a review.

TL;DR: It has been found that the relationship between affect processing and affective illness in terms of intra- and interhemispheric role is not straightforward.
Book ChapterDOI

Hemisphere Specialization: A Mechanism for Unifying Anterior and Posterior Brain Regions

Don M. Tucker
TL;DR: This paper will take the reverse approach, proposing that hemispheric specialization for elementary emotional and motivational mechanisms has been the primary factor in the evolution of brain lateralization, and that many aspects of asymmetric cognitive function can be explained by these asymmetricotional and motivational controls.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Emotional behavior and hemispheric side of the lesion.

TL;DR: The depressivecatastrophic reactions of the left brain-damaged patients were found chiefly in subjects with severe aphasia, and appeared generally after repeated failures in verbal communication, and seemed due, as Goldstein argued, to the desperate reaction of the organism, confronted with a task that it cannot face.
Journal ArticleDOI

Right-left asymmetrics in the brain

TL;DR: Anatomical asymmetries may help to explain the range of human talents, recovery from acquired disorders of language function, certain childhood learning disabilities, some dementing illnesses of middle life, and the evidence for behavioral lateralization in nonhuman primates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Psychosis and temporal lobe epilepsy. A controlled investigation.

Pierre Flor-Henry
- 01 Sep 1969 - 
TL;DR: A controlled investigation comparing a population of 50 temporal lobe epileptics with psychotic episodes with 50 randomly selected temporal lobe epilepsyptics who had never experienced psychotic disturbances showed that these patients had no history of psychotic disturbances.
Journal ArticleDOI

Possible Basis for the Evolution of Lateral Specialization of the Human Brain

TL;DR: Patients whose neocortical commissures have been surgically divided for the control of epilepsy have revealed an organizational differentiation of the hemispheres for perceptual and cognitive functions.
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