Title: Variations in Cerebral Asymmetry
1Bryan Kolb Ian Q. Whishaws
- Fundamentals of
- Human Neuropsychology,
- Sixth Edition
- Chapter 12
- Lecture PPT
Prepared by Gina Mollet, Adams State College
2Variations in Cerebral Asymmetry
3Portrait Individual Responses to Injury
- A.B. vs. L.P.
- A.B.
- Damage to the posterior part of the left temporal
lobe - Difficulties in reading, speaking and remembering
words - L.P.
- Similar injury
- Trouble recognizing faces, and drawing pictures
- What could account for the differences?
4Handedness and Functional Asymmetry
- About 10 of the population is left-handed
- Marion Annett
5(No Transcript)
6Anatomical Studies
- Hand preference correlated with differential
asymmetry patterns - Left-handers show more variation in asymmetry
- More fibers descend to the right hand
- MRI
- Little evidence of differences in anatomy in
right and left-handers - Greater hemispheric interaction in left-handers
7(No Transcript)
8Functional Cerebral Organization in Left-Handers
- Majority of left-handers have left lateralized
speech - Larger incidence of left-handedness among
mentally defective children and children with
neurological disorders - Little known about cerebral organization of those
with right hemisphere speech
9Theories of Hand Preference Environmental
Theories
- Behavioral utility
- Proposes left hand is better for holding a shield
or holding a baby, thus allowing the free right
hand to perform skilled tasks - Environmental Reinforcement
- Bias in the environment
- Environmental Accident
- Genetic bias towards right-handedness
- Left-handedness develops through a cerebral
deficit
10Snapshot Genetic Influences on Brain Structure
- Thompson and colleagues
- Examined gray matter distribution in unrelated
people and monozygotic and dizygotic twins - High similarity in monozygotic twins, but not in
unrelated people
11(No Transcript)
12Theories of Hand Preference Anatomical Theories
- Right-handedness
- Enhanced maturation and greater development of
the left hemisphere - Most species have a left-sided developmental
advantage
13Theories of Hand Preference Hormonal Theories
- Geschwind and Galaburda
- Different levels of testosterone influence
cerebral asymmetry - Higher testosterone increased likelihood of
left-handedness
14Theories of Hand Preference Genetic Theories
- Annett
- Dominant gene rs for speech in the left
hemisphere and right handedness - Recessive gene rs- that results in no systematic
bias for speech or handedness - Model predicts about 12.5 left-handers
15Sex Differences in Cerebral Organization
- Sex Differences in Behavior
- Motor Skills
- Men superior at throwing and intercepting objects
- Women superior at fine motor tasks
- Both present in young children
16Sex Differences in Cerebral Organization
- Sex Differences in Behavior
- Spatial Analysis
- Men superior at mental rotation and in spatial
navigation - Women superior at spatial memory
17(No Transcript)
18(No Transcript)
19Sex Differences in Cerebral Organization
- Sex Differences in Behavior
- Mathematical Aptitude
- Men superior at mathematical reasoning
- Women superior at computation
- Perception
- Women more sensitive to all sensory stimuli
except vision - Men superior at drawing mechanical objects
20(No Transcript)
21Sex Differences in Cerebral Organization
- Sex Differences in Behavior
- Verbal Ability
- Women superior verbal fluency and verbal memory
- Aggression
- Physical aggression more prevalent in men than
women - Genes or Experience?
- Effects are found in young children and adults
- Even after training women perform poorly on a
water-level task
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24Sex Differences in Brain Structure
- Male brain larger than the female brain
- Females larger volumes in areas associated with
language, in medial paralimbic regions and some
frontal lobe regions - Men larger
- Medial frontal and cingulate region
- Amygdala and hypothalamus
- Ventricles and overall white matter
25Sex Differences in Brain Structure
- Differences in volume and organization in gray
matter - Influence of sex hormones
- Sex differences in the brain appear due to the
distribution of estrogen and androgen receptors
during development
26(No Transcript)
27Sex Differences in Brain Structure
- Established Asymmetries
- Larger left planum temporale found more often in
men - Men have larger asymmetry in the Sylvain fissure
- Planum parietale is about twice as large in men
- Women have more interhemispheric connections
- Women more likely to show an atypical fingerprint
asymmetry
28(No Transcript)
29(No Transcript)
30The Homosexual Brain
- Homosexual men outperform all groups on verbal
fluency - Homosexual women throw more accurately than
heterosexual men
31Sex Differences Revealed in Imaging
32(No Transcript)
33Research with Neurological Patients
- Degree of asymmetry in the lesion effects
- Differences in verbal IQ and performance IQ in
men and women after left and right hemisphere
damage - Intrahemispheric Organization
- Differences in the appearance of aphasia and
apraxia in men and women after left hemisphere
damage
34(No Transcript)
35(No Transcript)
36Explanations of Sex Differences Hormonal Effects
- Organizing Effect
- Effects of hormones on brain organization
- Leads to sexual differentiation
- Assumed to take place during development
37Explanations of Sex Differences Hormonal Effects
- Functional effects of hormones seen in adulthood
- High estrogen associated with depressed spatial
ability - Estrogen affects levels of catecholamines and
neuron structure - Low testosterone associated with high spatial
ability in men - Hormone replacement in women increases verbal
fluency and verbal and spatial memory
38(No Transcript)
39Explanations of Sex Differences
- Genetic Sex Linkage
- Recessive gene on the X chromosome accounts for
spatial ability in girls - Maturation Rate
- Brain matures faster in girls
- The slower the brain develops, the more asymmetry
appears
40Explanations of Sex Differences
- Environment
- Girls and boys are encouraged to engage in
different activities leading to different
abilities - Not supported by a bulk of the evidence
- Preferred Cognitive Mode
- Women prefer to solve problems using a verbal
strategy
41Explanations of Sex Differences
- Conclusions
- Six significant behavioral differences appear
between men and women - Verbal ability
- Visuospatial analysis
- Mathematical ability
- Perception
- Motor skills
- Aggression
42Environmental Effects on Asymmetry
- Culture and Language
- Asian languages might promote more
right-hemisphere participation - Reading pictorial Chinese produces right
hemisphere activation not seen in reading English - Exposure to multiple languages may influence
cerebral organization of language
43(No Transcript)
44Sensory or Environmental Deficits
- Brain organization in nonhearing people
- Congenitally deaf subjects do not show a right
visual field superiority for language tasks - Deaf signers may acquire language in the left
hemisphere, which may lead to development of
visuospatial abilities in the left hemisphere
45Sensory or Environmental Deficits
- Environmental Deprivation
- The case of Genie
- Rescued from an experiential deprivation and
malnutrition at the age of 13 - Developed cognitive abilities, but language
lagged - Found to be processing verbal and nonverbal
stimuli in the right hemisphere - Romanian orphanages
- Children had little environmental stimulation
- Long lasting damage to their brain development
46Sensory or Environmental Deficits
- Epigenetics
- Changes in gene regulation that take place
without changes in the DNA sequence - Alterations in gene expression can influence
cerebral function
47Effects of Hemispherectomy
- Both hemispheres specialized at birth
- Removal of the right hemisphere
- Deficits on complex visuospatial deficits
- Removal of the left hemisphere
- Deficits in understanding spoken language
- Equipotentiality
- Equal potential for the hemispheres to perform
any task - Hemispherectomy provides evidence against
equipotentiality
48(No Transcript)
49Ontogeny of Asymmetry
- Cerebral asymmetries are present before birth and
become more pronounced in adulthood - Left hemisphere shows a greater response to
language at 1 week of age - Parallel development theory
- At birth functional overlap between hemispheres
- Hemispheres becoming increasingly specialized for
more complex tasks
50(No Transcript)
51Asymmetry in Nonhumans
- Asymmetry in Birds
- Left hemisphere dominance for song
- Lateralization for visually guided functions
- Asymmetry for memory formation
- One hemisphere sleeps at a time
- Asymmetry in Rodents
- Larger right hemisphere
- Lateralized modulation of the immune system
- Left hemisphere dominance for species-specific
calls
52Asymmetry in Nonhuman Primates
- Chimps show asymmetries in Brocas area and in
the planum temporale - Chimps use the right hand for manual gestures
- Hemispheric specialization for processing visual
input - Japanese macaques use the left hemisphere for
communication
53(No Transcript)