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Journal ArticleDOI

Right hemispheric self-awareness: a critical assessment.

01 Sep 2002-Consciousness and Cognition (Academic Press)-Vol. 11, Iss: 3, pp 396-401
TL;DR: This commentary evaluates the claim made by Keenan et al. that since self-recognition results from right hemispheric activity, self-awareness too is likely to be produced by the activity of the same hemisphere and presents two views that challenge this rationale.
About: This article is published in Consciousness and Cognition.The article was published on 2002-09-01 and is currently open access. It has received 40 citations till now.

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Summary

  • This reasoning is based on the assumption that self-recognition represents a valid operationalization of self-awareness; I present two views that challenge this rationale.
  • The team of researchers first presented a series of pictures to a group of patients undergoing an intracarotid amobarbital (WADA) test.
  • S1053-8100(02)00009-0 patient s own face, and participants were asked to remember what picture was shown during selective anaesthesia of the right and the left hemispheres, also known as PII.
  • In a second study normal participants exhibited significantly greater right hemispheric activity (as measured by evoked potentials induced by transcranial magnetic stimulation) while presented with pictures containing elements of their own face, as opposed to images of a famous person.
  • Self-recognition has been repeatedly used to determine the presence or absence of self-awareness in primates (see Gallup, 1968, 1985, 1998) and young children (see Amsterdam, 1972).
  • They both believe that self-recognition is actually associated with an unsophisticated self-concept and does not require introspection.
  • The only awareness the organism would have of itself before self-recognition is a kinesthetic sense of its body—not a ‘‘full-blown,’’ mature awareness of its subjective experience.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2007-Cortex
TL;DR: This commentary examines conceptual and empirical difficulties pertaining to the notion of right hemispheric superiority for self-related processes and suggests that two main misconceptions lie at the heart of the controversy.

28 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The relevance of inner speech for psychological life has been recognized in the literature, and several scales and questionnaires have provided evidence as discussed by the authors, however, evidence coming from direct observation of the phenomena is still rare.
Abstract: The relevance of inner speech for psychological life has been recognized in the literature, and several scales and questionnaires have provided evidence. However, evidence coming from direct observation of the phenomena is still rare. The aim of this study was to specify modes of verbalized inner speech as expression of self-consciousness (reflexivity or internal conversation). Eighteen adults (between 19 and 34 years old) were instructed to express aloud their thinking during a task with the Brazilian version of the Raven Progressive Matrices Test. Participants' thinking-aloud verbalizations were submitted to a qualitative analysis based on three reflexive steps of semiotic-phenomenology: description, reduction, and interpretation. Description revealed a structure of verbalized inner speech organized on the basis of three main typifications: visual description, logical reasoning, and dialogue. Reduction recognized dialogical relations as an essential feature underlying verbalized inner speech, characteri...

24 citations


Cites background from "Right hemispheric self-awareness: a..."

  • ...Verbalized inner speech expresses the fundamental connection between inner speech and reflexivity, the latter defined as self-reflection by Morin (2002)....

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  • ...More specifically according to Morin (2002), inner speech is linked to self-reflection, that is, a non-anxious, healthy form of self-awareness....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that loss of insight should not serve as a core criterion on FTD, but serves well as a supportive criterion of the disease.

22 citations


Cites background from "Right hemispheric self-awareness: a..."

  • ..., the ability of the human being to be an actor and to observe the own actions on one and the same time (Killingmo, 1971), self-awareness (Morin, 2002) and introspection....

    [...]

  • ...In the literature, insight is often treated as a psychological or philosophical problem (Morin, 2002), but careful analyses of the concept are seldom applied to empirical dementia studies, which we consider a deWcit....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the role of extensive reading on vocabulary retention is discussed and pedagogical possibilities and strategies are suggested, and examples provided of tasks that may help to realize this goal in classroom contexts.

21 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a review of literature related to self-referential processes, where in the brain are these processes located, and do they correlate with brain areas uniquely specialized in self-processing?
Abstract: The present review of literature surveys two main issues related to self-referential processes: (1) Where in the brain are these processes located, and do they correlate with brain areas uniquely specialized in self-processing? (2) What are the empirical and theoretical links between inner speech and self-awareness? Although initial neuroimaging attempts tended to favor a right hemispheric view of self-awareness, more recent work shows that the brain areas which support self-related processes are located in both hemispheres and are not uniquely activated during self-reflective tasks. Furthermore, self-awareness at least partially relies on internal speech. An activation of Broca’s area (which is known to sustain inner speech) is observed in a significant number of brain-imaging studies of self-reflection. Loss of inner speech following brain damage produces self-awareness deficits. Inner speech most likely can internally reproduce social mechanisms leading to self-awareness. Also, the process of self-reflection can be seen as being a problem-solving task, and self-talk as being a cognitive tool the individual uses to effectively work on the task. It is noted that although a large body of knowledge already exists on self-awareness, little is known about individual differences in dispositional self-focus and types of self-attention (e.g., rumination versus self-reflection).

21 citations


Cites background from "Right hemispheric self-awareness: a..."

  • ...Let us start with the localization issue. ª 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd...

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  • ...One major problem when reducing self-awareness to self-recognition is that one most likely measures a rudimentary manifestation of self-awareness – not the full-blown version (Morin, 2002)....

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References
More filters
Book
01 Dec 1934

10,737 citations


"Right hemispheric self-awareness: a..." refers background in this paper

  • ...The basic hypothesis states that to recognize oneself one must first know who one is—one must possess a ‘‘self-concept,’’ which presupposes selfobservation; furthermore, exhibiting self-directed behaviors in front of a mirror would indicate that one is capable of becoming the object of one s attention, which is the very definition of self-awareness (Duval & Wicklund, 1972; Mead, 1934)....

    [...]

  • ...…must possess a ‘‘self-concept,’’ which presupposes selfobservation; furthermore, exhibiting self-directed behaviors in front of a mirror would indicate that one is capable of becoming the object of one s attention, which is the very definition of self-awareness (Duval & Wicklund, 1972; Mead, 1934)....

    [...]

Book
01 Jan 1972

2,144 citations


"Right hemispheric self-awareness: a..." refers background in this paper

  • ...…must possess a ‘‘self-concept,’’ which presupposes selfobservation; furthermore, exhibiting self-directed behaviors in front of a mirror would indicate that one is capable of becoming the object of one s attention, which is the very definition of self-awareness (Duval & Wicklund, 1972; Mead, 1934)....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence supports a preliminary theory of episodic remembering, which holds that the prefrontal cortex plays a critical, supervisory role in empowering healthy adults with autonoetic consciousness-the capacity to mentally represent and become aware of subjective experiences in the past, present, and future.
Abstract: Adult humans are capable of remembering prior events by mentally traveling back in time to re-experience those events. In this review, the authors discuss this and other related capabilities, considering evidence from such diverse sources as brain imaging, neuropsychological experiments, clinical ob

1,544 citations


"Right hemispheric self-awareness: a..." refers background in this paper

  • ...…to this notion that the right hemisphere would be at least partially responsible for self-awareness, Keenan et al. refer to an article published by Wheeler, Stuss, and Tulving (1997) and state that ‘‘patients with lesions to the right fronto-temporal cortex may experience a cognitive detachment…...

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  • ...If one wishes to localize self-awareness somewhere in the brain, then I would propose that the available evidence is rather pointing toward the left hemisphere (Morin, 2001), in conjunction with other bilateral cerebral structures, as Wheeler et al. (1997) suggest....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate the following age-related sequence of behavior before the mirror: the first prolonged and repeated reaction of an infant to his mirror image is that of a sociable “playmate” from about 6 through 12 months of age.
Abstract: The behavior of 88 children between 3 and 24 months was observed before a mirror, using an objective technique to examine the child's awareness of the image as his own The results indicate the following age-related sequence of behavior before the mirror: the first prolonged and repeated reaction of an infant to his mirror image is that of a sociable “playmate” from about 6 through 12 months of age In the second year of life wariness and withdrawal appeared; self-admiring and embarrassed behavior accompanied those avoidance behaviors starting at 14 months, and was shown by 75% of the subjects after 20 months of age During the last part of the second year of life, from 20 to 24 months of age, 65% of the subjects demonstrated recognition of their mirror images

655 citations


"Right hemispheric self-awareness: a..." refers background in this paper

  • ...…linked to self-awareness’’ (Keenan et al., 2001, p. 305)—a problematic claim I wish to closely examine here.1 Self-recognition has been repeatedly used to determine the presence or absence of self-awareness in primates (see Gallup, 1968, 1985, 1998) and young children (see Amsterdam, 1972)....

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Frequently Asked Questions (1)
Q1. What contributions have the authors mentioned in the paper "Pii: s1053-8100(02)00009-0" ?

In this commentary I evaluate the claim made by Keenan, Nelson, O Connor, and Pascual-Leone ( 2001 ) that since self-recognition results from right hemispheric activity, self-awareness too is likely to be produced by the activity of the same hemisphere. In a second study normal participants exhibited significantly greater right hemispheric activity ( as measured by evoked potentials induced by transcranial magnetic stimulation ) while presented with pictures containing elements of their own face, as opposed to images of a famous person. The fact that the right hemisphere seems to be involved in self-recognition is both intriguing and informative ; but then the authors go on to suggest that ‘ ‘ neural substrates of the right hemisphere may selectively participate in processes linked to self-awareness ’ ’ ( Keenan et al., 2001, p. 305 ) —a problematic claim I wish to closely examine here. It is very difficult to determine the exact meaning of ‘ ‘ self-awareness ’ ’ in the Keenan et al. ( 2001 ) article since the authors do not explicitly define this notion. Finally, recent research suggests that inner speech ( which is associated with left hemispheric activity ) is linked to self-awareness—an observation that further casts doubt on the existence of a right hemispheric self-awareness. In a widely publicized communication published in Nature, Keenan et al. ( 2001 ) report data suggesting that self-recognition would be the result of right hemispheric activity. The basic hypothesis states that to recognize oneself one must first know who one is—one must possess a ‘ ‘ self-concept, ’ ’ which presupposes selfobservation ; furthermore, exhibiting self-directed behaviors in front of a mirror would indicate that one is capable of becoming the object of one s attention, which is the very definition of self-awareness ( Duval & Wicklund, 1972 ; Mead, 1934 ). More precisely, Gallup ( e. g., 1983 ) maintains that some primates are selfaware not only because they show self-recognition, but also because they emit behaviors in their natural environment ( deception, altruism, empathy, etc. ) that strongly suggest an ability to ponder potential intentions and emotions in others— behaviors that presuppose an access to their own mental states.